Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 1997: Zuby Goes Off on Woke Culture, Freedom, Abortion & Other Third Rail Topics
Episode Date: January 26, 2023In this episode Sal, Adam & Justin have an uncensored conversation with Zuby who does not shy away from the difficult subjects that have divided much of the nation. Why he thinks the way he does. (2:...10) Living in an age of denial and cowardness. (5:45) The Long March Through the Institutions theory. (11:51) The concept of neo-racism. (14:50) The two advantages we have over our ancestors. (21:41) The power of tribalism. (23:20) Fighting human nature. (29:28) How parasitic ideas can spread. (31:57) Why humans are inherently religious. (36:39) Zealotry is a personality trait. (41:05) Will the pendulum swing back? (47:33) Disparity doesn’t equal discrimination. (53:32) The demonization of monogamy. (1:06:55) Why he tends to question authority. (1:10:28) How the 2nd amendment checks against global tyranny. (1:18:50) The role fitness plays in personal responsibility and growth. (1:23:19) The problematization of society. (1:34:28) Why he believes all modern western countries have eugenic policies. (1:36:44) Pro-life vs. pro-choice. (1:39:45) The deep population agenda. (1:57:40) His biggest concern with the push for transgenderism on children. (2:03:10) Why he believes we have passed peak ‘woke’. (2:06:11) Zuby the Maverick. (2:11:06) Imagining if the virus was worse. (2:15:30) Why every social movement without a clearly defined finish line will ultimately end up what it set out to fight against. (2:18:55) The importance of checking power. (2:25:20) The problems with lazy thinking. (2:28:08) Why he is pro-human. (2:30:57) His early approach to his rap career. (2:34:45) Not taking his success for granted. (2:40:07) Good ideas do not require censorship. (2:42:20) Related Links/Products Mentioned Visit Drink LMNT for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! January Promotion: NEW YEAR’S RESOLUTIONS SPECIAL OFFERS! (New to Weightlifting Bundle, Body Transformation Bundle, and New Year Extreme Intensity Bundle) You get massive savings with each offer. Real Talk with Zuby Podcast - YouTube Strong Advice: Zuby's Guide to Fitness for Everybody Long march through the institutions - Wikipedia USC will no longer use the word 'field' over racist connotations The White Supremacist Origins of Exercise in the U.S. | Time Rapper Zuby beats female weightlifting records while ... - The Sun Mind Pump #1480: How To Find Peace & Meaning Amid Chaos With Bishop Robert Barron Mind Pump #1922: Fatphobia & Other Lies That Are Keeping You Fat, Unhealthy & Sick Inside BLM co-founder Patrisse Cullors' questionable tax filings PolitiFact | Is Black Lives Matter a Marxist movement? Mind Pump Podcast – YouTube Mind Pump Free Resources Featured Guest/People Mentioned ZUBY (@ZubyMusic) Twitter ZUBY (@zubymusic) Instagram Bishop Robert Barron (@bishopbarron) Instagram Douglas Murray (@DouglasKMurray) Twitter Andrew Schulz (@andrewschulz) Instagram Jordan Peterson (@jordan.b.peterson) Instagram Joe Rogan (@joerogan) InstagramÂ
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If you want to pump your body and expand your mind, there's only one place to go.
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Salda Stefano, Adam Schaefer, and Justin Andrews.
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Oh boy.
Do we have an episode for you?
Zubi on the podcast.
He's a hip-hop artist, Oxford educated, brilliant, brilliant person.
Also social commentator, political commentator.
Very smart, gentlemen, very smart man.
Millions of followers on social media because of his commentary.
Quite controversial at time, but almost always logical and linear thinking.
We had fun having a conversation with Skyse
actually a three hour podcast.
I think one of our longest podcasts we've ever done
and no subject was off limits.
Literally think of the most controversial subject
you could think of.
We talked about that in this podcast
and he doesn't pull any punches.
It was a lot of fun.
It was controversial.
We think you're gonna joy this episode.
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All right, here comes the show.
All right, Zuby, thanks for coming on the show, man.
So I wanna open with this.
So you're a young man, you're black, hip hop artists.
For all intents and purposes, your opinions
are very different from what a lot of people would
assume, right?
People would think, oh, he's young, he's minority, he's in hip hop, he's going to have these
opinions.
And they're very counter from a lot of people would imagine you having.
What motivates you, what made you have these opinions, or why do you think the way you do?
And how has it received?
Yeah, it's a good question.
I think it's a tricky one to answer because I think it's difficult for any of us to know
exactly why we are the way we are and think the way we think.
I guess it's a combination of both nature and nurture.
I know for sure I have a pretty unique personality type.
It's extreme in various dimensions if you go off this sort of big five personality model, extraordinarily low in some things and incredibly high in other things.
And I've always been that way.
I also grew up in unique circumstances in various ways.
So I'm one of, I'm one of five kids.
My parents are originally from Nigeria, my family is Ebo.
And I was born in the UK.
So a lot of people know I actually grew up in the Middle East.
I lived in Saudi Arabia for 20 years from the age of one.
I went to school there from kindergarten to fifth grade.
I was in the American schooling system, which is why I don't even sound British.
I've never had a British accent before, but I'm also the only person in my family with
this accent, which is funny.
When I was 11 years old, I went to boarding school in the UK. So,
from the age of 11, I was traveling internationally by myself back and forth between Saudi Arabia
and the UK multiple times per year. I was in boarding school for seven years, went to two different
schools, did really well in school, got into Oxford University, studied computer science there,
that's also where I began my music career, graduated when I was 20. And then I did music full time for a year after graduating.
And then I worked in corporate for about three years
as a management consultant for one of the big companies.
And then in November 2011, I took the big leap
and went and pursued my music career full time.
So for the past 11 plus years, I've been self-employed
and I've just been on this adventure.
It just started out with only doing music.
Anyone who knew me prior to 2019 really
would have just known me as a musician and as an artist.
And then in the past four years,
I've added all these additional strings to the bow.
My podcast, Real Talk with Zubi,
I've written and released two books now.
I've been doing public speaking events around the world, just social media commentary, sociopolitical,
cultural stuff. A lot of people know me for that now, just for speaking out on all these
various issues. And yeah, it's been, it's been quite a journey. So looping background to
the original question, I think it's just this combination of my upbringing and experiences, my personality type,
and then the way, just the way I view the world, I guess I've just always had a different
angle of how I view certain things compared to how most people do.
Yeah, so did you, so you didn't feel one particular way and then have a moment that
meant that that made you you shift. No.
You've always kind of questioned and kind of went counter or just look for things for yourself.
I don't even know if it's counter because what's funny is some people consider me controversial
or polarizing.
And I think like 90% of the world agrees with most of my positions.
Yeah, so talk about that for a second because you know why?
Because I think I agree with you, but it doesn't feel that way.
It feels like it's 90 the other way, 10% with some of your views.
Well, I think this is something interesting that's happened particularly in this age of
social media, which is where you can make a very small minority, look like either a majority
or a very big minority.
So you can have 3% of the population that holds a certain opinion.
And with the power of the internet and even traditional media,
that 3% can be made to look like 50 or 60%.
So the truth is most people are sane and most people are relatively moderate
when it comes to social, cultural, political views.
Like there aren't that many people who are actually far right, or actually far left, or
full on, you know, like those are rare positions, even with all the, what people now call the
woke stuff, right?
Like, what percentage of people are genuinely like hardcore dyed in the wool wokies?
Like, it's not a big percentage of people.
Yeah, it's, they exist for sure.
And I have come across them in person,
but it's not, it's not huge suites of the population.
It's not even the sort of typical left-leaning democratic
or labor voter, you know, anything like that.
But with social media and also with the chilling effect,
what can happen is that most people stay quiet.
I think this is one of the fundamental differences
between me and most people is that I won't be quiet, right?
I won't just acquiesce and go along to get along
if I have something I wanna say
that is counter to that 3% or whatever I will say.
I will be the one who says no,
a man cannot be a woman, a man cannot be a woman,
a woman cannot be a man,
women cannot have penises,
men cannot get pregnant.
Everyone in the world knows this to be true.
Right. Ten years ago,
no one would have even felt the need to say this
because it wasn't up for debate,
but we're living in an age of denial of, denial of reality
coupled with cowardice.
That's probably the best way to put it.
So it's not even that most people cannot see through certain things.
It's just that most people will not speak up, right?
Everybody knows, look at the last couple of years, everyone knows that it makes no sense
to, for someone to wear a mask because you enter a restaurant and then to sit down
and take it off, eat for two hours with no mask on, stand up, put it back on, walk around like goofy.
It makes no sense.
It's a logical everyone is walking around the street or in a forest by yourself or driving
around in a car by the stuff with a map.
Everyone, it makes no sense.
It's silliness, right?
But people are doing it and going along with it because, you know, as human beings, we're
very social creatures,
right? And so it makes sense that the greatest fear in the world next to death is fear of social
disapproval. That's the greatest fear, right? The majority of adults are afraid of public speaking.
They're not really afraid of public speaking, because we all speak all the time. It's not that you're
afraid to talk. It's that you're afraid of looking
foolish in front of your peers. You're afraid of tripping up as you walk on stage. You're
afraid of saying the wrong thing and looking silly, right? People say, Oh, I want to start
a YouTube channel. I want to write a book. I want to start a podcast. But, you know, it's
this and this, the only thing that holds them back is fear of social disapproval, right?
They don't want to put up a video
and oh, people leave negative comments
or they downvote it or it doesn't get as many views
as they want and so they look salient.
All of these things, all the things that people want to do
that they don't, majority of the time,
it's that fear of social disapproval that holds them back.
And it's not even that that's something
that is inherently bad.
It exists for a reason, right?
There are, you know, shame is not a,
it's a neutral thing, right? There are certain things that you should feel shame about or you should be concerned about social disapproval.
I think evolutionarily exists because there's value to it as well. Yeah, there's absolutely value to it,
but I think that a lot of these basic
biological things that are wired in us, they can be
triggered and set off by the wrong things.
You see what I mean? So we have a natural, it's well studied for example that
human beings people, we are more sensitive to
negative and to threats than we are to positive for example, right?
So if this podcast goes out there and a thousand people leave a positive comment and
Five leave negative ones or harsh ones those five stick out. You're not there focusing on the thousand of wow like people really like this
It's like man. Why did that guy say? Why did that guy say that mean thing? You know you get two thousand likes and 80 dislikes
What's up with those 80 right? That's how we are and I think that's because
It makes sense to be,
you know, we're ultimately built to survive, right? We're built to survive. We're always trying
to perceive threats and dangers and things like that. And now that we live in this very comfortable
society, where let's be honest, like the real dangers of nature or of wildlife or day-to-day
survival, famine, disease, all those type of things.
They've mostly been taken care of, right?
On a day-to-day basis, you've not overly concerned about just survival.
How are we going to get our next meal?
We don't need to go out and hunt and kill to eat.
But I think that, but we still have that same wiring.
So I think that the things that set off those threat detectors become more minor and more minor,
like the bar keeps on decreasing on what it is that people are so fearful of.
Yeah, so I want to comment on that because just to back you up,
first off, for most of human history, if you were ostracized, that made you die.
Yes.
So it's a top fear because there was, because it was a real risk for your life.
And have you seen those studies where people,
and these are funny studies, but they're real.
People get their office.
Yeah, people walk into a doctor's office,
everybody's actors, except for the person walking in.
A bell will go off, everybody will stand up and sit down.
After about two or three times,
the person who's not the actor just follows along.
Or they'll be like an elevator
and everybody's lined up in single file,
facing the wrong way, and the person naturally gets behind everybody and just does the same thing.
So I think that proves what you're saying that it's extremely powerful.
So along those lines, do you think that this minority of crazy voices is popular because
of algorithms and clicks or do you think that there's something more nefarious?
In other words, do you think that people are taking advantage of
this fear mechanism that we have for being socially ostracized and are using it to keep everybody as silenced?
So that this appears to be the
majority and if that's the case, then why?
Why not?
Also, how much of it do you think is artificially engineered?
So I think this stuff, I mean if you really want to go deep, it goes back many many decades. There's been what's called the Long March through the institutions. So I think this stuff, I mean, if you really want to go deep, it goes back many, many decades.
There's been what's called the long march through the institutions. So, you know, if you really
want to go to the origins of what, again, like what people now call wokeism or cultural Marxism or
these sort of, honestly, far left ideas, which have now got a grasp of, of course, academia, but also in entertainment, some elements
of big tech, other institutions. A lot of this has been intentionally planned for many decades,
since many, many decades before I was born. You could go back to the, to the Frankfurt School.
So these are not new ideas, but what's happened in the past decade is they've gone
more mainstream. And then, so yes, it is intentional because there are small elements out there
who want to upend and overturn many elements of society and kind of flip the hierarchy from
what they currently perceive it to be. And then there's a lot of people who would fall kind of into the useful
idiot category where it's not like, oh, they're really deep on all of these
theories and they've really read up on Marxism and postmodernism and
the origins of gender ideology and queer theory, all of these things.
You could name certain people who are the architects of these ideas, and they've never even
heard of them.
But they're still espousing and mirroring the ideas that they got in college or whatever
it is.
So in this situation, they're sort of acting like useful idiots.
So it's not a new, these ideas are not new.
They've just penetrated and gone beyond the fringes of academia,
very much in the past decade, which is why,
if you talk to most people,
regardless of even where they sit politically,
a lot of people would say that around
somewhere between 2011 and 2013,
it's like we entered, there was some kind of break,
and we entered some new, weird reality
where like, prior to 2010, some of the conversations
that are now being had and have been had over the last few years,
these were things that weren't up for debate.
These aren't things that people were saying
or questioning and so on.
That's when they started getting weird.
And that's when it really started getting weird, right?
I think that's when it tilted.
I'd say 2012.
So that's why I often say that in the past decade,
that's when clown world- So'd say 2012. So that's why I often say that in the past decade, that's when clown world.
So my encounter was right.
Yeah.
Essentially.
Now some moderates would say, so what,
leave me alone, why is it such a big deal?
Why do you think it is so important that we speak up
or do you and or do you believe it's,
these are dangerous sightings?
Yeah, exactly.
It's if the ideas are destructive and dangerous and harmful to people on an individual and
a societal level, which I would absolutely argue that these woke ideas are.
I don't even like that word woke.
I just, there's not really a better term for it that people are going to easily understand
that encapsulates all these different ideas, right?
So this encapsulates the gender theory, which includes the modern notions of transgenderism.
This includes what people would call critical race theory and ways of viewing, you know,
race in society, right?
Someone who believes this idea will look at a room like this and
Automatically they're making all sorts of judgments and aspersions based on all of our skin color, right?
They already know racism is happening. They're just trying to work out
Right, right? Like no matter what you do right now, right? If you say that you're not racist
Yeah, that's that's evidence that you are racist
Yeah, you can't win if you like okay no no matter what you do like if you are racist, right? Yeah, you can't win if you like, okay, no matter what you do.
If you're white, right, if you say you're, if you deny it,
then that's evidence of your racism, right?
That's your white fragility or whatever nonsense they call it.
If I say that I don't typically experience racism
or that I don't see people that, right?
They're, they'll say that, oh, I'm, you know, that's my internalized racism,
or now you can be a black white supremacist.
So maybe I'm white supremacist.
Right, they have all these goofy ideas.
Remember when she pelted that bit?
And everybody thought that was so funny.
Now like, yeah.
Yeah.
Everybody's like, no, you can actually, yeah, right?
Yeah, right?
Just a couple of weeks ago,
they had the article with Kanye,
and you know, talking about,
was it multi-acial, white supremacy
or something and you're just like,
what on earth are these people talking about?
So yeah, all those ideas,
some of the more extreme notions of, you know,
modern day, third or fourth wave feminism
are encapsulated in those ideas.
So, you know, it really is just cultural Marxism.
It's instead of the bourgeoisie in the proletariat,
you're splitting it along typically race, sexuality,
and gender.
That's why those are the three sort of categories that are always going with that way.
But to me, all the above are destructive.
That's why it's a problem.
Because these are number one, it's false.
Number one, the ideas are not, they're's false. Right number one the ideas are not they're they're just false
Yes, okay the idea that all white people are racist that is false
Right, this is one of their tenants. I know it's literally a tenant, but I'm like that that is false the idea all black people are breath
It's complete bollocks, right?
My British is just living out, right?
But it but it's it's it's it's false. It's false and also it's divisive and damaging.
Right, if you're regardless of what skin color you are
or whether you're a man or you're a woman
or you're straight or you're gay or whatever,
if you're walking around either believing that you are,
just by dint of who you are, you're an oppressor, right?
And that you're somehow holding other people down
and you need to somehow atone for sins
you haven't committed or whatever,
like that's not healthy, that's not positive.
If you're a black person or you're a woman or you're this
or you're that and you're supposed to walk around all day
believing that you're repressed and people are against you
and you're actually kind of a second-class citizen
and all of these things and you know
that it creates animosity between people,
right? You don't want to walk around all day hung up on your identity and people's immutable
characteristics, all that stuff. It's not accurate and it's not helpful. And I think you
can genuinely see the division that it causes. You can see the division when you've got people,
again, it's weird
because these are kind of, I call it neo-racism
because actually they're just slightly flipping ideas
that people had a century plus.
It's still collectivism.
It's all collectivism.
It is, it's still going back to, oh no.
These are the type of people who will tell you
that this racist to be colorblind, right?
That if you say something like, oh, you know what,
I don't really see a race, like I don't judge people that way or whatever you say something like, oh, you know what? I don't really see a race.
Like, I don't judge people that way or whatever.
They're like, oh, no, that's a problem.
And it's like, why do you, this isn't this is what the KKK
we're pushing, right?
That you have to split people into, you know, the whites
and the non-whites and treat people differently based
on this.
And you've got people who are pushing for segregated
graduations and having different dorm rooms
for different ethnicities.
And so I'm just like, that's psychotic.
Strangely moved away from just basing it off
of your character.
Yeah, it's going full circle.
It's like Pac-Man, you know,
if you go all the way to the far right of the screen,
you pop back up on the far left.
If you go on the far left,
you pop back up on the top.
It does feel like that.
What a great analogy.
What a great analogy.
It does feel like that.
You know, so I have a theory as to what
maybe driving all of this. And really, if you if you really want to look at evidence
for this, if you look at the Soviet Union and how they effectively manipulated their people,
a lot of what they did is they would say one thing and they would counter it and then
they would say something else and constantly getting people to the point where they didn't
know what was right or wrong
and they waited for their leaders to tell them what to think.
And I feel like if they destabilize us enough to,
this is true, then tomorrow, this is not true.
This word means that, no, tomorrow, now it means that.
Eventually, we have no solid footing, we hate each other,
we don't necessarily know why, we have no solid footing, we hate each other, we don't necessarily know why, we have no solid footing,
makes us very easily manipulated.
What university was that?
It just came out two days ago with field.
You can't, they're gonna, they,
field is racist.
Oh, yeah, did you see that?
The word field?
Yeah, the word field is being removed from a,
USC.
Yeah, yeah, it was a USC.
Yeah, they, they removed the word field.
You can't say football field in your field. Yeah, we meant to call it. Yeah, I don't even know USC. Yeah, they removed the word. You can't say football field anymore.
Yeah, we meant to call it.
Yeah, I don't even know what they're called.
How far can we go with this redefining?
Let me guess this is because like field
harkens back to plantations labor.
Yeah, caught a few.
I guess I'm a little bit of a liar.
I didn't even know that.
I had that ass like what?
I don't even understand.
It's a problem with field.
I don't know.
But I do feel like if they do this and they do this well enough, we're very easily manipulated.
So it's like, let's get them all, do you agree?
It's like 100%.
It's divided in conquer.
It's not again, it's nothing new.
Which by the way, what I didn't understand, and I just like literally heard someone to
have this conversation, is that that's actually human nature.
Like that we come out with this desire to try and conquer.
We actually have to fight against that not happening. So the
people that have this idea of, oh, we'll just, you know, oh,
it's not a big deal. Leave it alone. Like you don't realize that
if you just leave it alone and we just go to what's natural to
us. It's turning. It is to conquer. Yeah, it is. And it's
tribalism. You know, something I think about a lot is just
the human nature is just what it is, right?
So first of all,
number one, history is still happening, right? We have an idea of history is in the past,
like we're done with history, like we're living in the history of the future right now, okay?
So history is not done and
modern people, I've said this before, we only have two advantages over our ancestors. That's it.
Biologically, I've said this before, we only have two advantages over our ancestors. That's it.
Biologically, natural urges, all that stuff, we are the same.
We're the same, where the same is our great-grandparents, our great-great-grandparents.
So, why the seven deadly sins are just as applicable today?
Yeah, we're thousands of years old.
Yeah, the only two advantages we have are, number one, we have better tech.
We have better stuff.
Right, we literally have better technology, these microphones, medical stuff, food stuff,
all the tech that we have, we have better stuff.
Number two is we have access to the past.
We know what happened in the past, so there are even certain ideas.
How do you know certain ideas are bad that we were just discussing because we've done
that before.
How do we know racial segregation is not good?
Because it's been tried.
How do we know slavery is a not good? Because it's been tried. How do we know slavery's a bad idea,
beyond like, you know, something in art?
It's been tried for thousands of years.
This is what it led to.
How do we know it's bad to judge people
and treat people differently
based off immutable characteristics?
Because most of human history,
that's actually what was done
and it's still happening in some parts of the world
and it leads to misery
at the worst it leads to faking genocide, okay?
So let's not be so, in the words of CS Lewis,
let's not have so much chronological snobbery
and think that we're so far ahead of all these people
and whatever, like you can see how quickly people
go back to tribalism.
Remember just last year or the year before,
where it was more, it was more 2021,
where it peaked when the whole
vaccinated versus unvaccinated division, right?
The way that the media just managed to split people
into a binary tribes,
that no one had ever even thought of before.
We've had vaccines our entire lives.
You know, that's the first time I've seen that,
something like that, go and divide
family and friends. It happened in my own family and friends. Like millions. And I would consider
myself a very non-political type of person and so many of my family and friends like that. And
it divided us. It's crazy. Millions of people across the globe that happen. Millions of families
and friendship groups disrupted by that. Right? No one ever lost a friend over whether or not someone took a flu shot.
No.
Any or any, think of all the vaccines that are available.
No.
No one ever gave a crap.
No one even, no one ever even knew whatever it wasn't commonplace to even ask somebody,
oh, did you take, like, whatever, who cares?
That's your business, that's private.
And the media very intentionally, very intentionally and the politicians, they
managed to just split people so that people's own sons, daughters, brothers, sisters, friends,
they're now looking at each other askew or don't want to be near each other based off of
this thing, complete psi op, complete psi op, right?
But that shows the power of it.
So one thing about human nature is we have a tendency to be
tribal. And again, tribalism, just like we were talking about social disapproval, it's not something
that's inherently bad, right? Of course, there's positives to tribalism. If you've got a family,
right, there's a, you feel tribal about your family. I trust people I know more than people I don't.
Absolutely. Everybody does. Everybody does. Your nation, you typically are going to tribal about your family. I trust people I know more than people I don't. Absolutely, yes. Everybody does.
Everybody does.
Your nation, you typically are going to care about your country,
or even your city, or your state,
more than, it doesn't mean you don't care about the rest,
but we have all that, you know, in group out group,
in group out group.
If you're a member of a religion,
or a certain community, or whatever,
you're going to feel more affinity towards people
within that to some degree.
And that's fine. So I think the solution isn't that, I don't think you can't get rid of tribalism.
It's there. But to me, the solution is, you make the tent as big as possible.
Right? So instead of focusing on all the, you know, the minutia of the things that people
have different, which is infinite, it's all right,
well what do we all have in common?
Let's go up a level.
Let's go up a level, right?
So when people are dividing along all these things,
it could be race, it could be ethnicity,
it could be gender, it could be religion,
it could be politics, it could be whatever.
If you go up a level or two,
that's where you always find the commonality, right?
So something that's interesting to me,
one of the differences between the UK and US, for example,
is say on the topic of race,
I don't like talking about racial stuff,
but I think this is interesting and important.
So in the UK, you almost never hear the term
white, British, black, British, Asian, British.
It just breaks.
It doesn't just sound weird. It doesn't even sound weird. If someone said, oh, it, British. It just doesn't, it just sound weird.
It doesn't even sound weird.
If someone said, oh, it's a, it's a, it's a,
it's a black, it's a black, it's a black,
or it's a, it sounds weird.
But in the States, black American, African American,
Asian American, white American,
like these are terms that you hear.
What a good point.
All the time.
And as an outsider, that's something that strikes me.
I'm like, that's weird.
Why do they do that?
And I guess I know some of the answer because there's historical reasons for it. But I'm
kind of like, you're all American. Like, why the prefix is, why, why, why the obsession
with the prefix is if you, if you just drop that and it's just like American, then automatically,
even even in terms of how you write it, it bonds everyone. I'm like, well, you're
all American, you're all country made like you're all from the same place. Why are you going so granular to the point where, okay, now you've got all these, you're
creating new lines of fracturing, right?
And now you've got, I don't know, now that, because that's what they do with all the intersectionality
stuff.
Well, again, I don't like the idea because it's like, oh, well, as a black lesbian, female, vaccinated, expert, like whatever, like you can't just be just
just see who you are.
Yeah, I think ideas are probably a good way, like thoughts, behaviors, ideas, beliefs,
probably a better way to put people together.
You know, along those lines, America in the, you know, 19th century and early 20th century, I mean, to come here was really you just showed up.
If you just showed up, you were accepted.
And we still are a country of immigrants, but boy, back then, where we, a massive country immigrants, most coming from Europe,
and just to preface a lot of people think that, oh, they're all white.
Okay. The Tians, Germans, French, Irish, were, I mean, they were not, they didn't consider themselves
the same at all.
I mean, Europe went to war, World War twice, you know, over their differences.
So they all came over here.
Super different.
The Tians, Germans, Irish, I mean, very, very different, but they had, they had ideas that
were the same and the ideas were, we're all here for freedom and liberty.
We all want opportunity.
I know my family came here for that,
for that same, I'm the product of immigrants.
So they all bonded over this idea of freedom and liberty
and they built businesses and worked with each other
and here's the word tolerated.
Actually tolerated each other pretty well.
And they did pretty damn well as a result.
We grew.
All of a sudden, it's become this divide instead of unite.
It's very strange to me.
It's weird how we've done that.
And then back to the behavior commentary,
it is true that we have natural behaviors,
but what makes this human is our ability
to consciously look at our behaviors and modify them.
I mean, I work in the fitness space. I've worked in fitness for over two decades.
Like, our natural tendency is to overeat, not move, right?
But we know better, and so in modern societies, you know, those of us who are more conscious about it,
move more and eat healthier. Because if we just listened to our behaviors,
we would have be sick and unhealthy.
So I wanted to touch on that because people make the
nature argument and although there's some truth in there,
there's lots of truth in the fact that we become enlightened
that we can look at things and modify them.
And I think that's really important.
Yeah, absolutely.
And look, if you're an adult, even as a child,
we constantly have to fight human nature, right?
We have to fight human nature
and we have to fight our own individual nature, right?
We all have our own set of personality traits
with flaws, we have our precludes, the things that,
you know, where some people have quite addictive personalities,
right?
You know if you have that, you're quite prone
to becoming addicted to things.
Some people are more prone to laziness
while some people are more conscientious.
We all have these different things.
And I think part of becoming a functional adult
is like you said, not just saying,
oh, well, I have this natural urge,
so I just indulge every natural urge.
I mean, if you do that, you're gonna be a terrible person.
You're certainly not gonna be successful.
So I think it's a matter of just recognizing, okay,
this tendency exists, both within myself
and within other people.
Knowing that, how do I become conscious of it,
and then what's the best way forward? that, how do I become conscious of it?
And then what's the best way forward?
For example, if you're someone who you know,
you're, I'd say I have a personality that's somewhat addictive.
I think I have a tendency to form habits pretty quickly
and get addicted to things.
And I've used that very much to my success
to become addicted to things that are positive, right?
So completely just their stuff.
I won't even touch all of that stuff, right?
But then cool, I'm addicted to going to the gym and exercising.
I've been doing that for two decades at this point.
It's like as natural as brushing my teeth.
I enjoy the work that I do.
I enjoy, you know, you can spend a lot of things
into something positive, right?
So I think that's the best way to,
I think that's the best way to do it.
And it looks different for different people.
But I think, look, fundamentally, you're not gonna,
you can, how to put it.
I don't think we can fundamentally change human nature.
It's just what it is, but we can change how conscious we are of it and how we approach
things both individually and collectively in order to keep certain things in check.
I want to ask you about fitness because I know you're a big fitness guy.
In fact, that's how somewhat along the lines of fitness, that's how you kind of got popular. Was your deadly record?
Yeah. Which was absolutely brilliant.
That was brilliant. It was brilliant. I never thought I would see these ideas, you know,
and again, using the term woke ideas permeate my space, fitness. I never thought that.
And yet it is. Nothing is safe. Nothing is safe. I've seen now articles saying that lifting weights is toxic masculinity.
That the, you know, the, I just shared a article the other day.
The answer from white supremacists. Yeah, the white supremacist roots of gyms.
A exercise. Yeah. A exercise body acceptance movement, which doesn't,
is not real body acceptance. They've morphed it into
something different. How do you feel about it? Because you've been working out for a long time.
Yeah. Were you as surprised as I was when I saw it come into my space? I was like, what?
No, no, because I've, this stuff's been on my radar for a little longer than it's been on most
people's. And even before I started to publicly speak out on some of this stuff, I was talking about it privately with people for
five, six years, as I always said, certainly from the early 2010s. And so I saw the trajectory
that these ideas were going in and I saw that they were going to, I don't know, say for example, even something goofy like the whole
preferred pronouns thing or the made-up gender thing. I mean, I don't know, say for example, even something goofy, like the whole preferred pronouns thing or the made up gender thing. I mean, I, I saw there, I saw that happening
in like 2013, really, 2012, yeah. And I was like, this thing is going to become a thing,
right? Even with the deadlift that I did. So I remember having conversations with people
back in 2016, 2017 talking about this, saying that there's gonna be a whole issue with males
identifying as women and competing in female sports
and crushing.
I was saying this back in 2016, 2017,
it doesn't sound that long ago.
And a lot of people would like look at me weird
and be like, come on, dude, that's not gonna happen.
That's super crazy.
Yeah, it sounded goofy even just like,
I mean, it is goofy, but it sounded,
nah, come on man, like people won't accept that.
And I was like, dude, it's gonna happen.
Like it's already happening in certain places
and you're just not seeing it, it's not mainstreamed yet.
And then, I mean, that deadlift video I did,
that was four years ago.
That was four years ago.
And even when I did that in February 2019,
it was on some people's radar,
but not to the level that it is saying now. Now people are more aware of the fact that
this is happening. And it's even happening like these, you've got dudes winning female
beauty pageants and all of these other things that are happening. And so now it's sort of
hit a mainstream consciousness. But I think that if you see such things early, it's quite
easy to see where they're going.
So I knew that these ideas,
they're not gonna just stay within academia
or entertainment,
it's gonna get into every single thing.
It's in the military,
it's in the fitness world,
it's in the science world,
it's in everything.
To use the term,
God's sad would use,
no, he calls them... Parac, he calls them parasitic, right?
Mindvirus is. And that's how they spread. And I think they also spread because there is
something, I think there's a lot of reasons. I think the fact that society is much more
secular is a massive factor in how these things are able to spread because to some degree they act
as a substitute for traditional religion to a lot of people.
You worship something. So if you worship God, you're going to worship.
Yeah, I believe human beings are one of the strongest conclusions I've come to in the past
few years is truly that I believe human beings are inherently religious.
I always lean to think that that is true. Now, I'm like, I absolutely believe that to be true.
And that religious urge can be supplanted by lots of different ideas and ideologies, and people can
become religious and zealous over many different things, which is really what we're seeing.
can become religious and zealous over many different things, which is really what we're seeing.
But I think that's a factor. I think also that it appeals to a lot of people's emotions and feelings, and people do want to have a sense of morality and right and wrong and in-group and
out-group and have some type of idea of an enemy.
And I also think that it appeals because, what was the last point I was going to make
there?
Slip my mind.
No, explain what you mean by humans are inherently religious.
Yeah.
What I mean is that naturally, even if you just think of it sort of pragmatically, human
beings, every person, especially as you grow into an adulthood or as you are an adult,
there are certain things that you are going to seek and want. These include purpose, meaning, a sense of morality,
a sense of community, some guidance and ethics on,
what is right and what is wrong.
We've already talked about the fact
that there are tribalistic elements and so on.
And for most people around the world, even still,
most people religion answers all of these things, right?
It provides meaning, it provides purpose,
it tells you how you should live your life,
what rules you should go by.
Of course, it gives you a sense of community,
whether you're Jewish or you're Hindu
or you're Christian or you're Muslim,
you've got your community there, you've got your guidelines.
And it offers answers and explanations
for many things in the world, right?
So science is cool, but there's a lot of stuff
that no matter how advanced science gets,
you can't answer.
Science is largely amoral, It's not immoral.
It's just, it explains how things are.
It's supposed to be immoral.
Yeah, it's supposed to be. I'm talking about actual science, not the science, which is
now turning into a secular religion.
Scientism.
Yeah, scientism, right? And so I think that, look, whether someone believes in, if someone is a theist and believes
in God, you're going to believe that the religious urge is just hardwired in human beings because
we are from God and created in his image.
But even from a, I'm not an atheist, but even if you were a totally atheistic secular person who just thinks it's just,
you know, we're just on the spinning rock
flying around this on and we've just evolved
over all these years, the truth would be even then,
you've, in that case, we've evolved to be religious.
Why are billions of people all around the world,
you look throughout history, Most people have always been
religious. Most countries, most tribes, most groups have had different, different religious beliefs in a way. So even if you took that hardline evolutionary perspective, it's still easy to conclude.
Okay, well, there's clearly a proclivity towards religion, right? And maybe there were
societies that rejected this in the past, but they're not around
in this time, and maybe there's a reason for that. So I don't think you can really get away
from that, from that urge. And something that is interesting is even with people who are
more secular or consider themselves atheists and so on, they're still looking for all those aforementioned things.
Maybe some people want to go and sit on a mountain
and meditate, maybe they want to do psychedelics,
maybe they want to, but they won't use their term God,
but they're trying to get closer to the universe
or to the source or to whatever it is, right?
That's different ways, but it's so fascinating to me
So yeah, there's different ways, but it's so fascinating to me that you can't,
it's interesting because so many people are rejecting
traditional religion or trying to move this way,
trying to move away from it,
and you still see those regents.
Just for the frame it.
Yeah, you still see those same religious urges
and impulses.
Like when I look at the hardcore wokeies,
I'm like, that is a secular religion.
That is a core.
It's, if you look at the way,
the people who were like,
we're really into the COVID stuff, right?
What I call branch comedians, like it's, yes.
It's a, it's a religious, it's, it's jealous.
They're more religious than the average religious person in many ways, right?
If you don't take their beloved vaccine, like they won't even sit in the same room with
you, right?
I'll sit in a room with someone who's like, unbaptized, no problem, right?
Imagine if you don't, I'm like, no, that person's, you know, they're not baptized, they're
not can, we can't even hang, we can't even talk whatever.
And so they're taking it to, here's another thing I believe.
I believe that zealotry is a personality trait.
And you can kind of run different software on it.
So when I see those type of people, I think these are the people who would have been, you
know, a few hundred years ago, they'd be the ones, you know, calling people out to be
witches and wanting to burn them at the stake or whatever, right?
Because they have that overzealous personality trait.
Agreed.
It's not that the zealogy comes from the ideology or the religion or whatever.
I just think some people have that personality trait and it leans the more towards authoritarianism
and they like to be holier than now and want to tell other people what to do.
And absolutely, you get people who do that
under the basis of religion.
You have people who do that under the basis of politics.
You've even got people, even with diet, right?
You have people who, are you kidding me?
Is he like man?
And like we know, you don't bring up religion,
politics or diet.
I didn't even do it.
Because you don't know.
You know, it's funny.
So because we make choices,
every decision you make is a choice as a human.
We're conscious of our choices. So I wore these shoes because they're better than another pair of shoes I have for today.
I take a left because that's a better direction than, you know, taking whatever.
Ultimately, you have a top value. And that is what you end up worshiping. So that's so, so because we, we are hierarchical creatures.
We make choices. We don't just act,
through instinct, we actually make choices,
that means at the top as a top value,
that's what you end up worshiping,
whether you're conscious of it or not.
And there's one thing that all totalitarian regimes
and cultures, for all human histories,
one thing they all have in common,
either they get rid of God,
so that they can replace God or they become God, and they say, I am your God. That's one thing they all have in common. Either they get rid of God so that they can replace God or they become God and they say,
I am your God.
That's one thing you'll notice.
So you look at, like, this is why they get rid of the church or they oppress people
who believe in a religion or whatever, because if you believe in that this God is your God,
then you can't possibly worship the regime.
So for this is one of the reasons I think that this is exploding, I agree with you.
It's because we're so secular.
And so we're left floating and wandering.
It's very easy to plug in something else, whether it's done on purpose or we just, you
know, we interviewed Bishop Barron, a while back and he said, historically, he said, if
you don't worship God, you tend to worship money, power, pleasure, or honor, which can also be fame.
And if you look around, it makes total sense. This is what we end up just through our actions, what we end up worshiping.
So it is very interesting. And this was predicted. You know, these communism was predicted.
And these types of ideas were predicted by people who
weren't even religious. I'm trying to think of his name popular. Yeah, yeah,
they would say like God dies. What's gonna replace that? It's gonna be yeah really bad.
Yeah, and it makes total sense. Again, and I'm not even making an argument for the
existence of God right now. But if you just think about this very logically
and pragmatically, you use the term hierarchy, right? So we'd all recognize that we have a
hierarchy of values or morality or authority. So for someone who believes in God, the answer is
what's at the top of the hierarchy? God. God is above myself, above the government,
above any other ideology, whatever God is at the top.
Just logically, if you remove God from the top of the hierarchy,
there still has to be something at the top, right?
You can't have a hierarchy with nothing at the top,
just logically. There's got to be something.
So what's now at the top? Oftentimes it's the state, as you alluded to earlier, right? That's
where stateism comes in, just worship of the government and the government ideology. It could be
politics, it could be nihilism, it could be hedonism, it could just be yourself, right? Okay, well
if there's no, you know, I'm at the top, right? I decide what morality is.
I decide whatever.
And that can also often just go to, all right,
I'm just going to seek pleasure.
If it makes me feel good, that's what I do.
And that's hedonism.
Or you could also just fall into, oh, you know what?
Like it's all none of it matters.
And that's more like nihilism.
You could end up, we've already talked about statism.
You could just, you could fit whatever else celebrity
worship, materialism, money worship, it could just be okay, well,
that the top is money or power, right? That's all that's at the top.
So as long as, you know, it's in pursuit of power, it's in pursuit of money,
whatever ethics morals, whatever, that doesn't even matter. And this is also
where truth becomes subjective, right? So I think before, whatever, ethics, morals, whatever. That doesn't even matter. And this is also where truth becomes subjective.
Right?
So I think, before, again, before about 2012,
I don't think I ever heard anyone use the term,
terms like his truth, her truth, your truth, my truth.
No one used to speak like that.
There was just that truth.
No one used to speak like that.
Just go back to 2008.
No one used to say, oh, that's her truth.
That's his truth. That's new. That's new speak. And so even to me, that's interesting because
that's people then just putting, okay, now the truth is subjective. If I feel that it's
true, and I say that that's my truth, then not only is it true, but if you question it
even, or you challenge it, or you challenge it or you say,
wait, hang on, you don't get your own truth,
then that's now perceived as an attack, right?
That's not just you disagreeing with me.
That's you denying my existence.
I'm sure you guys heard the phrase, right?
Where people say you're trying to erase my existence.
You're denying my, I'm like, I'm not trying to deny it.
Like, if you're a human being, like, I'm I'm not I don't I've never denied the existence of
Any right I'm just saying that if you know if one of you right now were to say that oh, you know, I'm now a woman
I'm like and you know and that's your truth. I'm like, yeah, I mean you can you can believe what you like
but you're not actually
A woman and me saying that isn't me trying to attack
Anyone or be vicious towards anyone.
I'm just saying that that's objectively not true. You know, you can believe that this this table
in front of us is a circle. You know, I'd support your right to believe that. You could say it's a yellow
circle. I'm like, that's a brown rectangle or cuboid, but you know, we're living in this time
where if someone's like,
no, actually, it's not a yellow circle.
You're being violent.
Yeah, yeah, you're being, I don't know, geometry, fobic.
Does it all unravel?
Does it all unravel?
Yes.
Are we going to see it soon?
I feel like, let me give you some optimism.
Okay, I'm off to bringing it to the bottom.
Of the three of us on the most optimistic,
this is the natural swing of the pendulum.
It's just swung harder than ever
because of technology and stuff like that.
It's coming back.
Tell me, do you know why, before I, before I answer,
let me explain why I also why I think
that some of this is happening.
I think a lot of it is happening because
for the first time and in the first place
in all of human history,
we actually truly have
equality under the law and genuine, generally speaking true social tolerance for the first time ever, right?
So if you go back to any previous decade let alone century in this country and
any other country, you could very clearly point out laws, either laws on the books or social laws that were genuinely discriminatory
or bigoted towards a certain group of people or groups of people, right? No one would
deny that even in a country as great as the USA, I mean, it's only, it, how long of black people even had the right to vote in this country.
It's not even a century.
People used to be enslaved, people were not allowed to vote.
All sorts of things.
And keep in mind that the US is like a head of most countries in terms of resolving these
things.
Slavery was abolished here and before it was in most of the world.
For thousands of years, human beings were enslaving each other
and doing all sorts of awful stuff.
So there was always a fight, right?
There was always a fight of like, okay,
we need to genuinely have equality under these laws.
We need to genuinely tolerate people.
You know what, it's wrong to beat someone up in the street
because they're a different race or because they're homosexual
or this or this, right?
That was even happening in the freaking 90s right so
We've made all this progress and finally actually reached a level where if I'm like okay
Tell me a law that is just outright discriminatory against like a group of people right you think you'd really struggle
Right the closest we got was when they started all the discriminating against the unvaccinated nonsense
Which is one of the things that made alarm to me so much about it. I was like,
what the heck? This is a huge step backwards. People can't do it. Even when you've got
these people marching for women's rights or whatever, and someone asks them, okay, like
what rights do you want that you don't have? They can't answer.
I can tell you a couple actually. There's laws that in here, I don't know how they are in the UK, but here where let's say you're Asian or white,
you have to score higher.
So there's a formative action laws that are actually
discriminatory.
Those are the only ones that I know of that are
on the books actually described.
And isn't that interesting?
Because that's an over correction for what they
perceived to be the issue.
So you think we're just spoiled
and we just need something to...
I think it's two things.
I think number one that people haven't noticed.
I think with the constant push for progress
and fairness and equality and all that,
which is a good urge,
I think people haven't sort of looked up and gone,
wait, hang on, like we did it.
Right, like actually. Like, wait, we actually have,
like, maybe we should come down and go to the next.
Yeah, right, like there's still that zealotry
of I wanna fight, I wanna fight.
And then following on from that,
I think there are people who are just activists minded, right?
Yeah.
Particularly on the left side of the aisle,
and some of them, especially the older ones,
like they have been fighting for all these decades, right?
They were part of the civil rights fight. They were part of, you know, this. They were part of that.
And so they still, they're looking for the next thing. I think a Douglas Murray calls this the
St. Georgian retirement syndrome, right? Looking for dragons to slay. You're still there with your
sword, looking for the dragons, and you know, you're swinging around, and it's like, actually,
you've already slayed them. That's the example. I think we just saw with USC. I think it's got to
his point where like, we are now actively looking for something. That's the example I think we just saw with USC. I think it's got to his point where like we are now
actively looking for something.
There's gotta be something else racist.
There's gotta be something else that's impressive.
You find it, you know?
Oh, feel, there it is.
So I said before, you know, racism isn't, you know, dead,
but it's absolutely on life support, right?
And they keep jolting it trying to, you know,
bring it back to life because there's so much juice
and there's money in it.
Juicy what's his name?
Smoole, he had to hire people to beat him up to bring it back to life, because there's so much juice and there's money in it. Juicy, what's his name? Smolley, he had to hire people to beat him up,
to say, literally committing hate crimes against themselves.
That's the thing is that's only one of many of you.
That's right, right, right.
The crazy famous we know about it.
Right, right.
It's like, it's actually crazy,
where literally you hear about a so-called hate crime,
and now I'm like, yeah, they probably did it to themselves.
Right?
And that's happened.
People say, oh, there was racist graffiti.
There was a, they find the guy on CCTV.
He's there like, right?
You know, he's there doing it himself.
Or there was that one with, what's that?
What's the NASCAR driver?
Yes.
Oh, yeah, what the gaysian.
Robo.
Yeah.
I was gonna say, Boba Smollett.
I can't remember his, Boba. Yeah, there was that whole thing.
You know, they had all that and it turned out it wasn't anything.
So, you know, I think it's good that people have those urges to want to have the fairness
and the equality and all that, but I think if you people kind of looked up and had that
sense of gratitude and just go, okay, wait, hang on.
Where were we in 1923?
Yeah.
In a hundred years, one person's lifetime,
you've gone from people,
so different.
So different.
So different.
And it's peak, the KKK had, I think,
four million members.
Yeah.
Four million.
Wow.
Right?
Isn't that nutty to think?
There were people in Congress,
and in like, you know, in government who were openly KKK,
can you even, like you can't even fathom that now.
That sounds unreal to think that there's open KKK members
in Congress and in the police force and so on.
So the strides have been incredible.
And I think people get so stuck on the past
that they can't go, okay, like that was F'd up, that was bad.
But yo, look at how much progress has been made
in such a quick time.
Let's have some grass use.
Is that how you would counter the argument
when people trick,
because they try and lean on like statistics still,
like you sample this would be like the gender pay gap
with women as they'll lean on like statistics
to try and prove
that it's still going on, it's still bad.
I think they go in with a belief
then they use this statistic, don't break it down.
And they don't want to look at the nuance.
It justifies there, oh, this see, it still exists
because something that's important for people
to understand is that disparity
does not equal discrimination.
Oh, so glad you said that.
You're right, people will just look at a statistic
and go,
oh, there's a disparity.
Therefore, some type of ism or phobia is taking place.
And I'm like, that's the most low resolution version
of anything.
There's our infinite reasons.
What a great point.
For all sorts of disparities.
Anybody who understands data and statistics
knows that that's a terrible way to break down a number.
You don't make a conclusion right out the gate. So you got to figure out what your controls are and statistics knows that that's a terrible way to break down a number.
You don't make a conclusion right out the gate.
So you got to figure out where your controls are and what's going on.
Otherwise, you've got nothing.
Well, that's how exactly how the gender pay gap unravels, right?
As you start to unpack it and go, oh, well, you also take in factor in that women are
pregnant for nine months and that would naturally make a sense.
That's a way to do different jobs.
It's like a different thing.
You know, it was interesting about that one.
I had a conversation with them.
When that was real, when they were pushing it politically,
I had a conversation with a friend who was like,
see, this is what's going on.
I said, and asked them, I said,
what, why do companies outsource to other countries?
Well, to save money,
because they could pay less for the same kind of labor.
And I said, well, if women are getting paid less,
why don't they just hire women?
And those, they look very cost effective.
Oh, wait a minute.
Is it making a sense?
This is why I think these ideas, they emotionally hijack people.
Yeah.
And they don't think of it past like five seconds.
Because if something like the gender pay, like the fact that's that even persists still,
like that's been being debunked since the 90s.
Yeah.
And people are still like, oh, women are earning $0.77 on the dollar or whatever.
And I'm just like, bro, please, how are you?
How are you still repeating this?
I mean, the thing is also people don't often,
some people don't apply just common sense.
So I had someone who, I remember getting in this conversation
where there was this music festival happening in the UK.
It was a hip-hop festival.
And there was this person on Twitter who,
they had the lineup of the,
all the performers on the bill. And he blanked out all of the male
performers. And there were maybe like six or seven female performers
out of, I don't know, 50 or 60 people performing on the thing. And
he was like, ah, right, you know, this is evidence of sexism in the
music industry. And I was like, bro, how many female rappers can you name?
Right? Literally got to like three and was like, um, uh, what a, and I'm like, how,
I was like, hip hop is like at least 90% dudes, right? Way more men are rappers than our female.
Not because women are not allowed to be rappers.
Women have been allowed to rap for many decades,
but because men and women are different.
Right?
Right?
You can look at areas where it's 80, 90% female dominated.
Nursing, obvious one, primary school teaching.
Only fans.
Right?
Right?
Right?
I don't have to go there.
I feel like that's one of the best arguments to disrupt that argument.
It's like, well, then what's going on with the men getting paid equally on only fans?
Even modeling.
Female models are paid a lot more than that model.
And that why?
Because supply is a supply and demand, right?
But it's, these things are not, it's funny because they're not hard to understand at all.
And what's weird is because just living your life, even if you don't
get into all the studies and the data and all this stuff, if you've lived for 20 years,
30 years, 40 years, whatever, even just off your own experiences, you know that men and
women are fundamentally different in a lot of ways. And one of the most obvious ones is we have different interests.
Right?
I don't know how you can exist in the world and meet thousands and thousands of people
and not work out, even within your own family, even if you have kids,
if you whatever, you recognize, okay, like males and females are just different.
Yeah, sure, there's a lot of overlap and everyone has their own personality.
But there's fundamental differences, and that leads to different choices and different decisions.
And I'm of the opinion that not only is this not a problem, it's good.
Right people get hung up on like the issue of like, oh, trying to get we need gender balance in this and we do.
I'm like, what's wrong with it being it? Why do we have to be the same? I'm cool with inequality.
Inequality is good.
That's gonna get close.
Right?
No, but genuinely, in many things, what's not good,
what's not good is unfair discrimination
and mistreatment and denial of opportunities.
Yes, that should be able to do what you want.
Yeah, but that doesn't mean that everyone's gonna
wanna do the same thing.
No. And God and God forbid, that would be awful. Right. We all have siblings, right? Yep.
Okay. And you know, you've got children. Even within the same household. Yeah.
What you do versus what your siblings do, the decisions you end up in different fields.
I can't even raise my kids the same.
I have to parent each of my kids differently
because they're different.
If I parented them all the same, I would fail.
Yeah, it just doesn't work.
I just heard a great comedian say that he was up on stage
and he asked all the audience that had kids
if they had babysitters and how many of them
actually chose a man.
Not because you didn't choose a female to babysit kids,
not because you're sexist, because you're smart.
Yeah, but you're not.
Here's a deal. I guarantee you if we pull up a video of someone doing something absolutely crazy,
it's that risk their life, nine at a ten times it's a guy. It's gonna be a white guy too.
It's good.
You know, we're not. It's true. It's true.
It's true. It's true.
It's actually true, you know.
Every time you argue that.
I can't disagree with points to shooter.
I'll be reading certain things all that's a white dude.
I was like, no black guy, let's do it.
We won't even go camping.
You went skydiving without a parachute.
Looking for bigfoot, you know.
Every time.
That's a white dude.
I mean, but they exist for a reason.
One of the easiest examples of what the reason would be is it's men are expendable.
So we evolved to take stupid risks because a society cannot survive when 50% of its women
are gone, but 50% of the men, 90% of the men can be gone and the society will survive.
So we just evolved this way, but I think it's important to differentiate general differences, but then also there's
individuals.
So it doesn't mean that you can't be a man and be interested in the things that women
generally are and vice versa.
It just means that generally speaking, men tend to do these things and tend to like things
and women tend to like these things.
And if we're going to understand each other, one of the worst ways to understand each
other is deny that. One of the most effective things I've ever learned
to help me communicate with my wife, for example,
was understanding some of those differences.
I can't talk to my wife like she's a guy.
She comes to me with a problem.
She's not wanting me to solve it for her right away.
Now Adam comes with me with a problem.
I know why he's coming to me.
He's like, give me some ideas, bro.
What do I need to do?
She just wants me to listen to her.
Generally speaking, I read this that women generally,
they just want you to kind of hear them,
whereas men just kind of want the answers.
When I read that, I went and communicated that way
and it was amazing.
Had I been like one of these people that's like,
no, we're all the same, that would have caused problems.
And it's also funny because women don't like being treated
like men.
Yeah.
Right? So for all this thing of like, here's another thing.
I'm a fan of treating people fairly.
I don't think treating people everybody equally even makes sense.
Right?
Because no one actually does that.
Right? You don't treat your own family and children and friends the same way you treat strangers.
That would be weird.
Right? But I believe you can treat everyone fairly, right?
But I think it's interesting because yeah people will say all that but if you actually talk to a woman in the exact same way
You'd talk to like a guy friend like they don't they don't like it. They don't like it. So
There's always gonna be
I just think it's I think we're problematizing a lot of things that just aren't problems, right? Sometimes even sometimes I do spots on TV or certain interviews or whatever.
And I come back up and I'm like, what problem are we actually trying to solve here?
Right?
Because you get lost in all these weeds and whatever.
And I'm like, well, what's the actual, what's the problem?
So say, for example, we were talking about like the gender thing or whatever.
So someone will be, oh, you know, I don't know the step.
20% of CEOs of the big companies are what?
Only 20% of the CEOs are female, whatever.
We need to do do do do do.
And people go into all these things, how can this be addressed, now can be fixed.
I'm like, so what's wrong with that?
What's the problem?
If 80% of CEOs are male and 20% are, what is fundamentally the issue there?
Like, why is that bad?
Why is that a problem?
And people can't answer that
because they just see the disparity in their life.
I'm like, well, 99% of construction workers are male.
99% of sanitation workers and lumberjacks
and people under the sewers.
It's all men doing all these crappy jobs
that crab fishing, all these jobs
that no one would want to do.
And it would sound nutty to be like,
oh, we need to get 50% female representation in these things.
And no one ever says that.
But then on these other types of things,
it's like, oh, we need this, we need that.
And I'm just like, what are you trying to solve?
Do you think we've glamorized just how much money
you make to the point where that now is how we look at value and we've undervalued things like
raising your kids or
You know being maternal or you know those those types of things that we tend to we we used to say were feminine
It's like well, oh you you raise your kids your good mom
You should be making a lot of money because that's way more valuable. I think that's crazy
Do you think there's a problem? I think that's a massive problem.
And I think it's quite pathological in fact.
I think that it's so interesting
how these conversations are framed.
So for example, coming back to the gender pay gap thing,
what about the gender time gap?
Right, what about how much actual free time you have?
What about how much time?
Most fathers wish they had more time with their children
and with their family, right?
So you could easily spin this thing on its head, right?
So they're all, you know, the men are making more,
men are making more, you're measuring everything by money,
right?
But it's like, okay, well, time is more valuable than money.
And if you disagree with that statement, you know,
consider if you'd swap places within 80-year-old
billionaire, and you wouldn't, especially an 80-year-old billionaire with terminal cancer.
Absolutely no, you would not, because time is actually more valuable than money.
Health is more valuable than money as well.
So you could easily say, oh, if I were being ridiculous, I could come up with some whole
thesis of how men are oppressed by society and by the matriarchy because they don't
get to spend as much time
with their families and children
because they're just these beasts of burden
who are just out there and working
and you know, they're more expendable,
they're dying and all these wars and whatever.
You could easily spin it and come up with a frame
that, oh, actually it's men who are,
it's men who are oppressed in society, right?
But I just recognize it as, look,
human beings in general, we all have our challenges,
you know, and life is gonna throw challenges.
There are challenges that are somewhat unique
or totally unique to each sex.
That does exist, right?
But I didn't make it that way.
It's just that biology is biology, right?
None of us are ever gonna have a period
or get pregnant or give birth or breath speed for it.
Like we are somewhat detaching that.
We can do our best to empathize and try to understand
what that must be like, but we're never gonna get it
and we're never gonna experience it, right?
So those are some of the unique things that that's like,
that's just the female, you know, the beauty and the struggle,
right? Like that's the superpower, that know, the beauty and the struggle, right?
Like that's the superpower, that's something that life comes from women.
Like that's amazing.
Everyone on earth was birth from a woman, incredible.
Mothers are amazing, that's incredible.
Men also have our own unique challenges and burdens
that women are never gonna totally, totally get, right?
Some of the duties that we just have and some of the pressure on you to perform in your
career and to make money and to be able to provide resources and protect them, all that
stuff to the degree, like that's a unique, that's unique to men, right? Historically, whether it's hunting or it's fighting
or it's whatever, that's pretty much male,
domain, women don't really need to think about that
or worry about it.
Even, I talked about this the other day on a podcast.
I mean, a decent looking woman,
even a not so decent looking one,
can live her entire life and never even need to approach,
like ask someone on a date or approach someone
they're attracted to.
As a man, like if you don't do anything,
nothing happens, you have to initiate,
you have to approach, you have to face rejection,
you have to do all of that stuff, you can't just stand,
I'm just gonna go to a bar and sit there and look pretty,
right, it doesn't work.
So there's just these differences and that's just, that's fine, these aren't things I'm trying gonna go to a bar and sit there and look pretty, right? It doesn't work. So there's just these differences.
And that's just, that's fine.
These aren't things I'm trying to fix.
I'm not here like being a busy but like,
we need to fix this and we need to fix that and fix that.
It's just like, no, that's just how it is.
You just said something that we just talked before you got here
about a V-interested to hear your opinion on this.
Like if you see a problem with this potentially in the future,
I think the stats on tender styles,
what you call it.
Or like 80% of the men get 20% of the women in there.
No, no, 20% of the men get 80% of the men.
So that's accurate.
Yeah, and do you foresee that as a potential problem?
I mean, this is also the argument of monogamy
and why we evolved to not have
these societies where everybody sleeps with everybody because eventually what would
have happened is a very small minority would get most all the women. Then you have all
these angry men who can't have sex and can't reproduce that end up with war and fighting
against each other. So we're now actually doing that unintentionally through this new
technology. Do you see where that could potentially lead?
Yeah, it's funny, because it's just cycles.
As I said before, where human nature does change.
Right, we just got, the technology has now enabled.
It's weird, because it's in a way,
what you're describing that phenomenon,
is almost like a reversion back many centuries ago
to where top dudes just had a lot of terror.
Had a harrow and they had all these women, multiple wives,
concubines, whatever, and then lower class men are just
kind of their struggling or not getting or whatever.
And we've just kind of come back full circle again
in a slightly different class.
It's wild when you think of it like that actually.
I mean, that we really are coming back
to the same way.
So what does it lead to, I guess, is the question is like,
yeah, I think in the long term, it's not positive.
Yeah.
It's not positive.
I mean, it destabilizes society.
It's not by accident that every country and culture
decided that marriage
and raising children within that monogamous structure is ideal, right?
I mean, you don't think in all the thousands and thousands
of years people haven't tried this
in all sorts of different ways.
Evolutionally, I do.
Yeah, people have tried all sorts of different things
and the one that's like, okay, the one that works
and is stable and keeps society functioning
and generally keeps people happy is, okay, one man, one woman, couple up, family, cool,
that's the unit, that's the basis of society.
And again, in our chronological snobbery, again, people are like, nah, I've got a better
idea, right?
They can do the better.
Yeah, like, we can do this whole thing better.
I love when people are like, we're so evolved because we do it this way.
I was like, you're not evolved.
They always try it a long time ago.
And do you know what's so interesting is that
you can see how these things actually play out.
So it's one thing to be theoretical with ideas and think,
okay, well, we could try that or that might work or that might work.
And if you actually, even with how people themselves
would pull themselves, you actually find that the happy people who are,
let me not even use the word happy,
people who are genuinely joyful and content.
For the most part, of course, there's always exceptions,
but for the most part, they tend to follow
a more traditional path, right?
Even with all the challenges and struggles and whatever
that comes shows it.
That come with, yeah, those people do tend to be long-term.
They're happy, they're more stable, they're less likely to get lost in, you know, drugs
or alcoholism and vices.
Married people with children, married people with children who are religious.
Look at the data, they live longer, they're happier, they tend to be sick less.
Yes. They tend to do better
And that's the person that were like demonizing. You know, you mentioned siop's a few times. Was there a turning point for you?
You were like, oh shit. Okay, this is what's going on. I mean, I could tell you there were two for me
The second one was what really made me go. Okay, this is weird. The first one was watching
transgender women fight women.
When I saw that and I was like, okay, this is crazy.
Everybody who's watching this has got to know
that this is crazy.
The second one was during the pandemic.
We had, this was one newscast, it was the same newscast.
They were literally hammering you in the newscast,
like all over the newscast, were at the time.
To stay indoors, stay six feet away,
don't spread the virus, you can get everybody sick,
switch over to the Floyd, the George Floyd protests,
tens of thousands of people pack together,
yelling and spitting on each other,
and they're like, oh, this is great, this is wonderful.
I'm by the, and then they say this literally
in the newscast, this is in no way
contributing to the spread of the virus.
Because they're all vaccinated.
And I thought, no, this was before the vaccine even existed.
I thought to myself, for sure, some side-up shit is going on.
Was there a turning point for you?
We were like, oh, here we go.
This is now I know for sure.
Man, I mean, not really.
I've been, I've been how I am for a really long time.
He's been, I've been, yeah, like, I've been how I am for a really long time. He's been, I've been, yeah, like,
I've been how I am for a really long time.
There's certain, what happens is things more tend to confirm
what I already, so if I'm already, like,
so okay, take the whole, what I call this,
Camdemic, going back to February 2020,
from the very beginning, February March,
I was like, this is weird, this is not adding up.
This is, there were, I were lots of alarm bells, right?
And then when they started the whole two weeks to slow this spread, you know, 15 days,
what a, I was like, there's no way on earth this is going to be two weeks.
If people give this in, people are going to be stuck for months, if not years.
But a lot of stuff wasn't, wasn't making sense to me right off the bat.
And then as it progressed, all that happened was those suspicions were confirmed, right?
You get to the summer of 2020.
They didn't just say that the BLM protests and riots
didn't increase the spread.
They claimed they reduced it.
Yeah.
So they claimed that the Trump rallies
and the anti-lockdown rallies were super spreaders,
but the BLM protests reduced the spread.
Like that, they actually said things like the rest of it.
That's right up there with the restaurant logic.
Like here you can get COVID, but not here.
Yeah, so that was that.
And I remember at the early stage,
they say, you know, don't wear masks, like masks,
you know, it's pointless, whatever.
And then it flipped, you know,
if you don't wear a mask, you're a grandma killer
and this and that and then just like,
there were so many things and they never explained them.
It wasn't like, okay, this change in narrative is because of this reason.
They just kept going and they kept switching it up and switching it up.
It's been a very weird time, but I think one thing that's always,
that's made me question authority more, is actually going to boarding school from the age of 11
because I typically I generally enjoyed boarding school. One thing I really
didn't like was rules that were rules just for the sake of it. I have no problem
with rules, I have no problem with legitimate authority, but rules should make
sense and be explainable.
If a rule exists just because it's the rule, then it should be logical.
Yeah, I have an issue with that. So let me give you an example.
So in the first boarding school I went to, this one I was 11, 12 years old.
The first and last five minutes of every meal had to be in silence.
You got a big dining hall, hundreds of boys in there all eating.
First and last five minutes had to be in silence.
Interesting.
Why?
Because that's the rule.
Right?
Because they said so.
That's so.
Because they said so.
Not because if they even give me a bad reason.
Right?
Give me something that doesn't even...
Something that doesn't even make...
But it was just like that's the rule.
And there were multiple things like that where it was just like, that's the rule.
And if you don't follow it, you get punished.
Like, it's not logical.
It's just a paragraph.
Did you counter-shit in boarding school
or you always get in trouble?
No, I was, I had one, two detentions in seven years.
Okay.
No, I was very, I was very non-problematic.
The kid, but questioned it inside.
And your head though, you're like, this bullshit.
Yeah, it's like, this doesn't make sense. And, you know, head though, you're like, this bullshit. Yeah, just like this doesn't make sense.
And to my parents' credit,
that's one thing they did so many good things,
but they never had rules that didn't make sense
or have a reason, right?
So I feel like when I grew up,
I had very clear sort of lines and boundaries
on certain things in terms of what's right and what's wrong.
That was very clear, but outside of that,
I'm glad my parents didn't just give us tons
of random rules to follow without a reason for it.
I know.
I don't have any behavior or reason for that.
They'll do that in the military for certain things
because it primes you to just
listen.
Yes.
So they'll give you rules that make no sense, follow it anyway because you're more likely
to follow everything else that they say.
Yeah.
And that's not maybe in the military.
That's I guess if you're on a battlefield, you don't want people, you know, questioning orders.
I understand that.
But in day to day life, I would actually argue that's incredibly dangerous.
Because if you look back at the worst things
that have ever happened in history,
they didn't happen because majority of people
are evil or wicked.
Listen, you can make that same argument
for that's not good for military either.
Because if the wrong person in power
directs that military to go in a direction
that is immoral or not good,
that so it can be just as dangerous in that situation.
Yeah, authority, you know, if an authority is corrupt and they have that level of compliance,
then it's extraordinarily dangerous.
That's it.
Yeah, look at the Nazis, look at communism, look at any sort of, you know, fascist or hyper
authoritarian.
And like I said, that's just people just following orders. You know, I'm not, you see it with police, right?
I was in Australia last year for, I went there for a month.
In September or October after, you guys saw all the craziness that they went through.
And you know, it was interesting talking to people there, especially in Melbourne, in
the state of Victoria, where they had over 500 days of lockdowns.
You know, police were out there
on the street fighting people.
I met people who'd been, you know, shot by rubber bullets,
by police.
I met people who'd been arrested for protesting.
Crazy for all this kind of crazy stuff
because they went even further with it all.
And I also met a police officer
who'd actually resigned from her job
because she was like, I can't do this, right?
What they're commanding me to do
to the people I'm supposed to be protecting,
she's just like, this is wrong.
This is not right.
This is not why I decided to be a police officer
so I can go out and fight protesters
who are just protesting to be allowed outside.
But yeah, I think these are things we always have to be cautious outside. But yeah, I think we, I think these are things we, you know, you
always have to be cautious and vigilant of that authoritarian urge and that I'm just following
orders type of thing. You know, I think with authority, authority should always be, you
should always be able to question authority, right? I'd say that if you're on authority,
whether you're running a company
or whatever it is even your parents,
if you have a rule or something,
you tell your kid not to do, and they're like,
why?
I think there should be an answer for that.
It shouldn't just be because I said so.
Maybe if you're talking to a two-year-old
and they can't, they're not gonna understand something, then that's one thing, but certainly especially
as people get older, you need to give people reasons for why things are like that.
Well, I think two comments on that one is I really think that the pandemic
gave these people, and when I say these people, I mean people who just want to rule half-power
And when I say these people, I mean people who just want to rule half power or corrupt, I think it gave them a wonderful test period to see how far they could go. How far can we push?
How until people say this is crazy, and if they do say it's crazy, how far can we push
until people actually do something about it? And I think that they were even surprised how far,
how they could say one thing and say another thing
in the same day and nobody would say anything.
Now, you're very versed in history,
very smart, obviously highly intelligent,
mostly grew up in the UK or you, you,
lastly, live there,
because now you move around quite a bit,
does something like the second amendment here in the US
make sense now that you know all these things?
That's the one thing that we have here in the US.
It's quite unique to the rest of the world.
Probably the most ridiculed.
If you go to any European country or anywhere else,
the one thing that they'll think is crazy is how
Americans can own guns as freely as we do.
You're from the UK.
Does it seem as crazy to you now?
Or does it make, does it make kind of sense?
Never, it never seemed crazy to me.
I've been a two A supporter since I was a teenager.
No, I've always understood the two A.
And I think the two A is more important
than most Americans even realize
because I don't think it's just important
for America and Americans.
I think it's important for the globe.
I think the USA's second amendment
is a check against global tyranny.
Not just American, not just tyranny within this country,
but globally.
And I don't think most Americans recognize
that it's actually, that it's that deep.
And I also think it's funny,
just look at the past century in Europe.
The idea that Europeans can't understand
how a government could potentially become tyrannical.
That's crazy.
You think of there somewhere in the world where they would understand that it would be in Europe.
I don't think it's by accident that the USA has never had a dictator come to power or anything
even close to it. The two A is a permanent check on that.
I think that the fact that certain states,
certain red states, you know, your Texas is,
your Florida's, your Tennessee's, I don't know,
didn't go as far with some of the C19 nonsense.
I think is in part due to the Second Amendment
and such high levels of gun ownership.
I think they realize we can't push people past a certain level as you were alluding to earlier whereas in
Many other parts of the world. It's like well
What are they gonna do about it right we can just roll over on them and I think that
Here's something that's tricky. I believe that because most people are
decent and or at least strive to be, I think it's
incredibly difficult for the vast majority of people to understand that a person or a group
of people can be genuinely evil, right?
It could be generally wrong, right?
We always want to make excuses for them.
There's always that.
They would never do that. Yeah, right. On different levels, whether this is governmental in state actors, or this is even
individuals, right? You know, a serial killer, right? A normal person or someone who goes and wants
to shoot, you know, shoot up a school or a mall or something, right? Like, we always want to think,
oh, there's, you know, either it's's it's mental health or this thing, right?
We're trying to find like something that fits our normal, sane, non-psychopathic framework
as to why someone would do something that heinous.
And the answer, you know, sometimes there are people do evil things, right?
Sometimes the answer is that person is evil.
That's why they did it, right?
And that answer doesn't sit well with most people
because you're like, no, no, there's gotta be like
some other, there's gotta be some law we could pass.
Yeah, yeah, but I'm like, yo, you gotta recognize
even with some of the people in power,
I'm like, yo, you're not dealing with,
not saying everyone in power is some type of psychopath at all.
But there are genuinely bad bad people
Insert in positions who genuinely do not give a crap about humanity like they do not care
It'd be interesting to actually see the statistics around people that seek powerful positions like that like they're true underlining motives
I wouldn't make the case there
You're gonna get a higher rate of that type of sociopathic.
There's a bias there, guarantee it.
Yeah, absolutely.
I mean, it's been said before,
and anyone who wants to be, I don't know,
president or prime minister, whatever,
like the fact that you even desire
that type of power should probably disqualify you
from the position, because most people
don't actually want to have that type of power and authority
over others.
So much for it.
So much for it especially.
Yeah, I mean, why would you be for decades like that's what you really, really want?
Like to me, that's weird.
I want to ask you this because you've been working out for a long time.
You lift weights, you're quite fit.
What role do you think fitness has played in some of the ways
that you think?
And do you think that they're attacking fitness
because of how it might affect the way somebody thinks
or how maybe empowered that makes them feel?
Yeah, absolutely.
Well, I think that something that's really been under attack
in, I'd say,
the modern West in recent years, especially in this past decade, are the notions of personal
responsibility and accountability. I think those things have been really under attack
and something interesting I've noticed is that most people who speak on those issues
to encourage people to get out of the victim narrative and blaming other people
and blaming systems and whatever and put the onus on the individual. Those people tend to be attacked.
So however you frame that message, it's something that certain elements want to reject or push away from.
And that shouldn't really be surprising.
I think the reason why personal responsibility
is considered controversial or why people reject it
is fairly simple.
I think it's because we don't want to...
It's kind of like removing someone's alibi, right?
If you tell somebody, let's just talk about health, for example.
Say you're talking about, you know, your body, your physique, you know, whether you're
at a healthy body weight or you're overweight or you're obese or whatever it is, people
want, would rather that it's not their responsibility and that they're just the result of social forces,
the advertising industry, the food industry,
genetics, this, that, right?
That's a lot more comfortable,
but disempowering than saying, you know what?
It's up to me.
What my body looks like for the most part,
no, we can't change our facial structures or whatever,
but like my actual physique and my general health
and well-being, that's up to me.
I choose what I eat, all right?
No one else is feeding me.
I choose whether I exercise or I don't
or what I do in the gym or not, right?
So I'm a big fan of responsibility and accountability,
not just because that's what moves the needle,
but actually it's empowering. Right? Once you get over your sort of feelings and emotions and
all that kind of stuff, and it's just like actually that's really positive. That means that I can move.
I'm the one steering my own ship. I'm not just a leaf that's blowing around in the wind wherever society and culture goes,
I've got control of that.
So one reason I love the gym and strength training
and working out and have loved it for such a long time
isn't just because of the physical benefits.
Also, of course, there's cognitive and mental benefits,
but it's also because you, number one, it's all on you, right?
It's not even like a team sport where, you know, you could play the best game of basketball
ever, the best game of football, whatever, but if you're, you know, the other team is better
or what do they, then you lose.
No, every time you go in the gym, the weights weigh the same, right?
45 found play is a 45 found play.
The bar is the same every time.
It's, there's no one.
It doesn't, the gym, the weights don't care about your race, your gender, they don't give
a crap, it's objective.
And if you get stronger, you get stronger, you're completely in control of it.
So on one hand, that's kind of scary, but on the other, it's like, well, if you take that and you apply that same concept to
your business life, your personal life, your relationships, your career, all of that stuff,
then number one, you're going to be more successful.
But I'd also say you're going to be happier and you're going to be more content.
And you can also own, sure, you take your Ls, but you also can take credit for your, for your wins, your
victories, right? You can be proud. You're saying, Hey, I built this thing. I created this.
It wasn't just like, Oh, I got lucky or whatever. Something goes wrong. You know, you own it
and be like, Yeah, cool. I made him, I made a mistake. I made an error. And, you know,
you can pick which path you want, right? You can take the path of, all right,
I'm never gonna accept any type of responsibility
or accountability, I'm just a victim.
Everything else is the fault of the patriarchy
and white supremacy and fat phobia in this and this.
And as you come up with all the excuses
and all the buzz terms you want,
and you can live that way,
or you can just be like, you know what?
I'm an adult.
I'm responsible for where I end up in life.
We don't choose where we, we certainly don't choose
where we start, right?
Like the cards you get dealt, we don't know.
You don't pick your parents, you don't pick what year
you're born in, you don't pick, you don't pick your country.
You don't pick your country.
There's tons of stuff we don't have control over.
I would argue though, that in the mod,
if you live in the modern day west,
I would largely argue that, you know,
with some, of course there's exceptions and caveats,
but generally where you end up is up to you.
You won the lottery if you were born in the west,
for the most part, if you compare yourself
to the rest of the world.
I would argue, I always make this argument
that fitness is one of the most powerful yet
most unassuming vehicles for personal growth because you don't know you're necessarily
on a vehicle for personal growth.
You think I'm just going to get fit or I just want bigger arms.
But then along the way, you learn like self acceptance.
Like, I don't know, you've been doing this for a long time, but I'm sure at one point
you realized you're not going to look like your favorite athlete or bodybuilder.
Like I remember as a kid, I realized I'm not going to look like Arnold no matter what
I do.
But then I just accepted it.
And I just kept going anyway.
Like that's a huge life lesson.
So it's not just about being empowered to change things for yourself.
It's also accepting what you can't change.
And that was a huge lesson for me as a kid.
So now in the real world, I can look at a situation
and I can see I have some control over this
or I don't and if I don't accept it.
Yes.
Otherwise life is gonna suck.
We can make this torturous or we can make this
feel a lot better.
So that's what I think about fitness. And I think it is funny how they're they're
painting fitness now. For example, there were some articles talking about how gyms are fat
phobic and, you know, terrible places. The most accepting places on earth for anybody who's overweight
is the gym. You've been in gym for a long time. You've been working out for a long time.
Tell me it's not the most accepting place
for your sexuality, race, weight, gender.
Like you're in there lifting weights.
You're working out next to someone who's working out,
lifting weights, they could be 80,
they could be 12, they could be obese,
they could be male, female, gays, whatever.
You don't care, we're working out in the gym.
Yeah, and everyone's trying to better themselves.
That's actually the most amazing thing about a gym environment is everyone is literally in there
because you are trying to better yourself. And any decent person is never going to knock or take
shots at or insult someone who is genuinely striving to make themselves better. There's a huge
difference between someone who weighs 600 pounds and is making every excuse
under the book and blaming everyone but themselves on their thing and isn't eating trash and not
even exercising or whatever, versus someone who weighs that same amount and they're trying
to get their diet in order and they've taken responsibility and they're putting in the
effort to get better, right?
Those are completely on the surface,
those people may look similar,
but they're completely different.
And here's another thing about,
it's impossible.
It's impossible to significantly,
at least naturally,
to improve your physique and fitness
for the better,
without also improving your mindset.
It's impossible.
They're hand in hand.
They're hand in hand.
If someone has lost a hundred pounds,
it's not just their body that's changed.
No, they grew as a person.
Their mind has changed.
And it has to because you can't lose 100 pounds unless for a significant amount of time
consistently you apply certain principles, discipline, perseverance, overcoming obstacles,
consistency, you know, all of the things, all the social challenges,
all the physical and mental challenges
that you have to go through to lose that hundred pounds.
That's a lot of body weight to lose, man.
Some people have lost 200, 300 pounds.
And you come out, you're the same person,
but you're a different person.
Same, if someone has gained, if a dude has gone
from skinny to jacked, right?
Especially if they've done it naturally,
you can't do that without becoming a better, without becoming a better person like you,
you have to.
And all those ideas, all the, all the lessons you learn from the gym, all those same things
you apply, if you apply them to anything else, if you apply them to your relationships,
if you apply them to your, your podcast, if you apply them to a business, whatever, then it works.
So it's such a great way of just teaching those
principles that you can then take in other areas
of your life and you just apply it in the same areas
and you will get some degree, you'll get some degree
of success.
This is why I used to love training kids
and I used to love training really old people,
really old people because they were so wise.
So when I'd train them, I would ask them questions
and I would just get all this great wisdom.
And kids, because I would see in real time,
their growth, and kids just,
they're just primed to change and grow faster than adults.
So I'd have like, I remember, I'll never forget this.
I had this one kid that I trained, he was 13,
super insecure, like almost in tears when his dad hired me.
Because he didn't want to, he went swimming with his friends,
didn't want to take a shirt.
So we started training together, and through that process,
he became this confident young man,
and they started dating this girl, became a trainer,
eventually became a trainer, and it totally changed his life.
And I didn't, I'm not coaching him on that stuff.
All I did was, hey, last'm not coaching him on that stuff.
All I did was, hey, last week you did two pushups.
This week you just did three.
Do you know what that means?
And he'd look at me like, no, what does that mean?
Like, you're not the same person.
You just see the light bulb go off in his head.
He's like, I am not the same person.
Like, look what I can do.
I can put work and change.
And then the self acceptance part,
this is why it's so important.
This whole body acceptance thing is baloney
or at least the way it's been twisted.
Yes.
Real self acceptance, like when you do this long enough,
like you have to do a lot of acceptance.
Like, you know, I work out, I do pretty well at it,
but I got accepted, I get older.
I'm not gonna be as strong as I was when I was 30.
In 20 years from now, I'm gonna be strong as I am now.
If I wanna keep doing it,
I better accept the fact that I'm getting older
and I better modify what I'm doing and change it
according to my lifestyle.
So to me part, this is one of the reasons why I was so surprising that this strange parasitic mindset
was trying to infiltrate the fitness base. I remember thinking to myself, all this is going to do is prevent people who don't understand from
Starting, but everybody who's been doing it, you can't touch us. You cannot go to somebody who's been working out for 20 years. Stinky bears, your self-approved men and growth.
So of course they're gonna touch it.
I think it goes back to what we said earlier
is just that I think we got into a point
where like the education system has influenced
these kids at such a young age that they come out
and they're looking for it.
Even though they haven't opened their eyes
and realized, oh my God, we're in this amazing time.
But they've been educated to look through that lens.
Therefore, when they get out into the real world,
they look at every situation from that bias of like,
there's gotta be some sort of racism,
there's gotta be some sort of sexism,
there's gotta be something going on here.
Let me find it.
I call it problematizing.
Yeah.
Right, problematizing.
Looking at everything through the lens
of trying to find out what's the problem,
what's the disparity, what's the discrimination,
what's the, let's problematize everything. And that's why, that's where they get these really goofy articles from, right?
So when you see these articles of like, you know, the dangerous rise of, you know, far
right exercise or the white supremacist roots of, you know, bodybuilding or whatever, like
these goofy ideas, that's what it comes from. It's people problematizing, right? You're
looking at a situation that's completely fine and you're trying to be like, okay, that's what it comes from. It's people problematizing, right? You're looking at a situation that's completely fine
and you're trying to be like, okay,
there's gotta be a problem here.
So let me, even if I got to scrape the barrel,
let's find out.
You know, it's funny about that,
but if you wanna know that this is just complete
bullshit propaganda, these people who say
the racist roots of this, the racist roots of that,
why do they ever point to the racist roots
of the leftist
parties in America? This is where the KKK literally was a, was part of the Democratic party.
Or why don't they point to the racist roots of a plan parenthood? The founder of plan
parenthood was eugenicist who literally thought it would be great if we could wipe out minorities
because in her idea they were, you know, not as good.
Because the reason why they don't, by the way, that doesn't mean that the Democrat party today
is racist. It doesn't mean today that Planned Parenthood is eugenics, although some people still argue
that. I would say they are. Some people, and this will get to that. Some people still argue that.
It just points that they will pick and choose how they can use propaganda and
it never gets reflected back on this is how you know they're full of crap.
So you know, they're not being genuine.
It's also how you know they're both on the same team too though.
Yeah.
That they both are just taking turns on who's the evil one on this side and we're, you
know, behind doors were on the same side and it's really about dividing and conquering
them.
That's my opinion.
So you said, I said, this doesn't mean
plant parenthood is still practicing eugenics
or whatever.
You said, I'd argue that.
What do you mean by that?
Well, first of all, I would say that eugenics is,
wow, we're going here.
Okay.
So firstly, eugenics is not gone anywhere.
It's the reality of it.
No one, no sane person in 2023 would consider themselves a eugenicist and would have a natural
adversion to that term being used.
But the truth is that modern western countries all have eugenic policies and that
millions of people in our country support eugenics, even if they don't call it that.
How do you mean explain?
So examples.
Yeah.
Give you some examples.
Okay.
Why is there no down syndrome in Iceland or Denmark?
How did they eliminate down syndrome?
Quote unquote.
Oh, that's true.
That's true. How did they do it? No Quote unquote. That's true.
How did they do it?
No, they abort.
They abort 100% of babies.
Oh my God.
Good Down syndrome.
Okay.
In the UK, the typical abortion limit is 24 weeks, which is extraordinarily late.
There's no limit if there is any type of disability.
That disability could be as light as a cleft palate, a cleft lip, right?
So if a baby, it's determined a baby has a cleft lip in the 34th week,
totally legal and fine to abort that child, completely viable.
For 34 weeks that child could live in survive.
Cleft lip, hardly the most severe thing.
Very solvable.
Yeah, I mean by definition, that's eugenics.
Right, by definition.
Even if someone doesn't want to call it that,
they might call it a woman's right to choose
or reproductive freedom or reproductive justice.
Relable.
They'll relabel it, but that's eugenics.
That's literally what it is.
I mean, yeah, and people might shy away from that word, but yeah, that's just the reality
of it.
And then if you're talking like plan parenthood, I mean, they still push their, obviously
majority of them, I believe, are still located primarily in minority communities.
They're always pushing the propaganda.
Of course, they do it under the frame of abortion being some type of freedom for, quote, unquote,
women of color hate that term.
And that, oh, black women need access to abortion and all these, they try to flip it all on
a TED.
But ultimately, that's the greatest killer of black people in the country by far.
There's places where there's more black babies aborted than born in every given year,
which is horrendous.
I'd say even for someone who's positioned on abortion is in favor of the rights, that's
an awful statistic. So you're pro-choice, but's, you know, an awful statistic.
So you're pro choice, but you're, no, I'm not.
Okay.
I'm out for full transparency. I'm very strongly pro life.
Okay.
But I'm saying, even for someone who is, you know, would consider themselves pro choice,
I think they, most people would still consider more black babies being imported than being born year on year in a location is not good.
Like that's.
Because of the problem.
Yeah.
Like there's an upstream problem there.
Like what's what's going on?
And then even if you look at the numbers, I mean the,
I'm not American, but I know that the black American population,
you know, sort of should be higher than it than it is.
But it's essentially been stemmed and cut as a result of these policies.
And things are being pushed.
You know, there's a lot of propaganda when it comes to this particular issue, crazy amounts
of profits.
Might be one of the most propagandized issues in the world.
And so I think that yeah, over the decades, people have been pushed and pushed to see this
through a certain lens, a simple lens of a woman's issue rather than a human issue, not
a life and death issue, but just something about freedom or liberty or medical choices
or justice or anything like that.
And it's not.
And if you get to the nuts and bolts of it, then when you have that real discussion, then
I find that people tend to shift more in the pro-life direction once they actually have
the information and they really, really think about it beyond the buzzwords and the euphemisms.
I think it's Andrew Schultz, he's a comedian.
He does this bit, which is hilarious.
He goes, I definitely pro-choice.z, he's a comedian, he does this bit, which is hilarious. He goes, I definitely am pro choice,
but you're killing a baby.
And so everybody first day, cheer,
and afterwards, like, ah,
and I think you can be objective,
you could be pro choice, but you can also say,
well, yeah, we're definitely killing a human
or the potential for a human.
I do think that if we were to reach our pinnacle of peace and prosperity and our potential,
we would value human life so much that even the potential for human life would be, or
if you want to consider that the potential would be totally cherished.
That's a human life with potential, not a potential human life.
Yeah, I agree with you. But I do think that the, it's very complicated in the sense that
there's a strong market demand. Yes. And like, what would we do? Because I think, you know,
the black market for that would be so terrible and dangerous, especially now with the demand being
so high. It's such a complicated issue. I think, you know, I'm kind of glad you brought that up
because the truth is, I think the real adult conversation
of this can kind of happen.
It can happen on multiple levels,
but I think that by the time you're talking
about the issue of abortion, something has already gone
wrong upstream, right?
Something's already gone very wrong upstream.
Again, on an individual level and on a general level,
you're talking about market demand.
If there's a demand for how many abortions are in the USA every year,
I think it's between 700,000 and a million per year.
What is going on upstream socially and culturally
where that is the situation, right?
And it's the, again, it's increased secularization, it's promotion of promiscuity, it's certain
social, cultural ideas that have been pushed so hard over the decades, where, because
look, let's be real.
We all know where babies come from, right?
Or we're not living in some dark ages where it's like,
okay, we don't know, oh, do women just sort of randomly get pregnant?
It's like, look, we know.
We know what happened.
Yes, right.
There's something upstream that's the half-in-six.
The logistics, right?
You know, we have access to, I believe,
there's over 40 different forms of birth control and contraception.
There's not getting pregnant or not getting someone pregnant is not rocket science.
Like we know how these things work.
We know how they can be prevented and ways
without you know, massive ethical issues and so on.
Yet people are acting as if that's not the case.
Again, it's the denial of responsibility and accountability.
And I would say that the attitude,
the mod this modern approach towards abortion is kind of
like the ultimate example of this outright denial of responsibility and accountability.
It's just like, okay, well, even if it means killing the most innocent, you know, member
of our species, let's, you know, let of our species.
Let's, you know, let's just hide it under the rug, right? Just hide it under the rug.
This thing has happened and it just,
just get rid of it.
Let's just, you know, just hide it away
and use this euphemism and people are gonna kind of think
it's, kind of think it's okay.
And I think that's, I think that's gross.
So I'll be real with you guys.
There's no, I think that's, I think that's gross. I'll be real with you guys. There's no, I think this particular issue
is the greatest blight on modern society.
I would go that far.
I think this is the great, just like, you know,
for all those thousands of years where, you know,
I imagine that even during the days of slavery, right?
Even here in the USA, like the USA was still like, you know,
one of the most progressive and, you know, so-called liberal countries and so on, right?
People at that time would have thought like, you're cool.
Like, we're advanced.
We've got great technology, but you just have this blight, right?
You've still got people who are enslaved and working in fields and being discreet.
Like, it's this ugly underbelly
that's there and it might seem on a surface level like everything is things are cool things are
fine but then there's this kind of thing going on underneath and people don't really want to touch
it or approach it because it's kind of it's not it's not very popular I feel like abortion is very
much that issue it's not something like you sort of see or conscious of day to day or whatever or really think about, but it's kind of just, you know, as I said, a million a
year just in this country, a million a year, right? It's it's wild to me and it's the,
there's, um, regardless of where you stand, the inconsistencies on one side are very strange
like yes. If we sent a probe to Mars and found cells that were alive.
We would come back and say there's life.
We found life on Mars.
If a pregnant woman gets hit by a drunk driver, it's a double homicide.
So it's very strange.
There's no consistency with that.
That's the part that really trips me out.
This is part of why I'm pro-life because it's a coherent position, right?
So we know that look, everything is either alive, dead or inanimate, right?
We know that a human baby in a womb is a human baby in a womb, right?
Women, women post up their scans, you know, 12 weeks, what?
No one, no one's ever attended a fetus shower.
No one's ever asked a pregnant woman how her fetus or blastocyst or embryo
is doing.
By the way, that's clear, that's clear political, like they, they changed the words, right?
You know, people ask when, when is the baby due?
If a pregnant woman is drinking alcohol, people are like, oh, that's, that's bad.
Why is it bad? Because it's harming the baby, right?
So there's people are tend to be
weirdly the pro-life
Consist position is very consistent, right? It's consistent. It's simple. It's it's not complicated
It's this is and this is a an innocent human life and
it's morally wrong to intentionally terminate an innocent human life regardless of the age,
regardless of the size, regardless of the location.
That's the position.
So-called pro-choice arguments, there's like 100 different ones, right?
Some people will deny the humanity.
Some people will say, okay, well, eight weeks.
Some people say it's 12 weeks.
This person says 15.
This person says 20.
This person says 24, this person says any
It's not it's not coherent because you have to keep moving the goal posts and using using euphemisms in order to get around
either the
human part or the killing part. Yeah, I think we know inherently that's why we know and nobody wants to say I'm killing a human
No, I think we know and that's why we do it or that's why we know and nobody wants to say I'm killing a human. I think we know and that's why we do it or that's why we accept the
verbiage that comes at us politically like fetus like it's a right it's you know
I think that's why and I think if we wanted to really because it's very
important you can have this conversation without talking about the root of
some of these and I think two things would make a big difference.
I think one is, and this doesn't make any sense,
actually makes sense to me when you think
they want to keep this a wedge issue.
But one, there's no reason why birth control
shouldn't be available over the counter.
There's no reason.
You could be over the counter, is it not?
Pharmacist, no.
You gotta go to get a prescription.
Should be over the counter.
So girl could go get birth control,
shouldn't be a problem.
That's one.
The second thing is I think society has done such a
media popular media is that it's such an effective job.
At making having kids look like a burden and this sucks
and oh my god, your life is over.
You can't go out and party, you can't do what you want.
Everything's ruined.
Like it's crazy to me.
I have kids.
It's hard.
It's expensive. I wouldn't try them for
anything. Good. It's the most meaningful, amazing, purposeful thing I've ever done in my entire life.
But we're not sold that. We're told that if you're a man, oh, now you got kids,
life's over. So you can't go, oh, oh, you're a, if you're a woman, you got kids, you're a press.
These children are pressing you. I feel like if we valued having children the right way,
like it used to be a man's glory was how many kids he had.
Man, we're going, how many children do you have?
Well, I got 15 kids, wow, I feel like that plays a big role too.
And not even, we're talking,
we're talking a few decades of stuff.
This is the crazy part, right?
We're not talking about these attitudes,
it was really in 60s from what I understand that stuff really started. It's when we divorced
sex from pregnancy with birth control. It started to happen. Exactly. And this has
fallouts, you know? And I think the fact that we're even having this conversation,
that's a, that's a fallout of those last few, those last few decades. It's a fall
out of hook up culture. It's a fallout of the decline of marriage, it's a fallout of hook up culture.
It's a fallout of the decline of marriage.
It's a fallout of these narratives that are being pushed,
both to men and to women in terms of what your life
should look like and what things are virtues
and what things are vices and so on.
It's like, I call it the inversion agenda, right?
Everything just being flipped on a tent.
Totally.
Everything being flipped on a tent.
Um, but yeah, it's a, it's a, it's a sad issue.
And I do think, I do think in the future,
I do think that future humans will look back on this
and look back on some of the attitudes
in the way that we look back at slavery.
I will, I will, I will go that far.
I think people will look back and they'll look at the numbers
and they'll look at the blase attitudes or even some of the outright promotion of it.
And they will be, they'll be gobsmacked. They'll be thinking how did people just, you know, I also think too that, you know, there's a lot of hang up with two specific issues with it in terms of incess and rape and then that becomes...
The driving factor.
The driving factor, which is also dishonest, right?
Because people only use that type of argument
on this particular issue.
So even those cases, typically you're talking under 0.5%,
not even half a percent, okay, for those edge cases. But it would be
like trying to argue that, like, if you're accepting the moral weight of the termination
of a human life, I mean, if you, for example, if you tried to argue that we can all think
of situations where homicide is morally justifiable, right?
It's defending yourself.
Yeah, someone's holding a gun to you or like pointing a gun at, you know, someone else
and, you know, someone shoots them first, right?
That's a homicide.
No one, you know, no one would say, but then you wouldn't use the fact
that justifiable homicide exists
to justify homicide in general, right?
You wouldn't go, okay, well, there's this 1% situation
where morally and ethically, that's neutral or fair.
So therefore, homicide in general is okay, right?
But that's kind of what people are doing
with the situation where you go to the most fringe,
most edge case, and it's an appeal to emotion,
because most people will be like, okay,
rape is terrible, it's terrible.
Yeah, exactly, but then they're like, okay,
so that's why the whole thing needs to be leaked.
And it's like, well, no, that doesn't morally
nor logically follow that
because you can think of an exception case where maybe something has a different moral weight
or could be potentially justified at least legally and then say, okay, so therefore it's across
the board.
So to me, that's just a, it's a, it's a dishonest framing.
It's a, it's a dishonest argument.
And you know, I think it would be, like I said, the things that are frustrating about the argument
are the lack of consistency and just honesty among certain people.
But then also the ignoring of the upstream conversation, right?
Because if you really want to talk about the science,
we need to talk about like approach to,
we need to talk about sex and sexuality
and people's behavior and decision making.
We need to talk about marriage.
We need to talk about children and family.
Yeah, it's a much bigger, more grown up conversation.
Yes, you can get lost in the weeds of the legality
and the moral and
the ethical arguments downstream. But I'm like, can we, if we could take this up a level,
then, and I would think that regardless of someone's actual view on the issue, most sane
people would agree that, like, say, say someone who, you know, considers themselves pro-choice both morally
and legally, for example, I think a sane person like that who would still want to reduce the number,
right? They'd still be like, maybe they think it's a necessary evil quote unquote, but everybody
agrees that it makes sense to figure out how to like reduce this.
Everybody used to, this is how deep the inversions got in.
You now have people who are actually like pro abortion.
That's a real position now, right?
So that's really dark, right?
To me, that's even like a separate category.
I can, you know, even though it's not my position, I can understand, you know, the kind of begrudging
position of someone like, okay, well, necessary, you know, maybe necessary evil, you know, even though it's not my position, I can understand, you know, the kind of begrudging position
of someone like, okay, well, necessary, you know,
maybe necessary evil, you know, maybe first 10, 12 weeks,
there's a right, I can, that's not my position,
but I can, I can, I can understand that better
when someone is just full on like, you know,
any reason, any limit, whatever,
or people who even say that it's, you know,
it's pro-social or it's good because it keeps the population down or because it keeps all
that kind of, I'm like, we were talking before about you, Janice.
Right, I'm kind of like, dude, like that's a, that's a, that's like a, that's, to me,
that's like a very disturbing position.
I mean, I've even had conversations with people who, and this logically does follow, right? Who think that, you know, infanticide is morally okay.
Because it's, you know, because one of the pro-life positions
would be, you know, obviously,
well, what's the difference between within the rumor outside,
right? Like, if someone's arguing that, you know,
abortion's okay, say up until the point of birth, you know,
I'd be like, well, it's the same,
what's the difference between inside and out? And some people would take them and go, okay, they raise no difference.
So therefore, I also think that for the first six months of a child's over Newborn's
life or whatever, I mean, this is the Peter's, this is the Peter Singer argument. I don't
know if you're familiar with Peter Singer. But his argument is that, I think for the first
one to two years, he's, he thinks that in fantasized should be legal.
And it's like, it's kind of like a logical follow-up
from that position.
Ironically, he himself has made some people pro-life
because they're like, that's crazy.
They're kind of like, he's right.
He's right, but where that leads to is freaking,
is like, okay, so maybe those other people,
maybe they're making more sense, because I don't really want to be siding.
This whole population control thing, it's existed for a while in different belief systems,
eugenics.
Now you see it with the climate change, people.
You hear this a lot, like, why would you have a kid in this crazy world?
We have too many people. This is so crazy to me because the best tool that humans have ever had,
ever, to solve our problems is innovation and ingenuity, and more people means we do better at that. And by the way,
all the data and historical, this is a fact, the more people there are,
the more things we figure out, the better off we tend to do,
and we can also have, a lot of countries are gonna have
population collapse as a result of these strange beliefs.
What the hell is going to,
well fact check me, but I mean,
can't you fit the entire world population
in the state of Texas?
You can, yeah, you can.
It's crazy to me.
It's a weird, crazy, it's like, why?
Why are they doing this?
Why are they telling us to not have kids
to that was too many people that,
yeah, people need to die.
Like when the opposite, even just for our standard
of living prosperity, innovation, that's not true.
The opposite is actually true.
And the fact that there's countries right now,
modern societies that are probably gonna collapse
because they can no longer,
they don't have enough people to,
Japan.
Japan is one of them.
Italy is in, you know, where my family's from.
They're kind of screwed right now.
China has screwed themselves with their one child policy.
Now they're having to figure out how to reverse out of it.
Why are we being told this?
Wow.
Okay, this is where I'm just going to be hypothetical because I don't understand
everyone's motives. Number, there is a depopulation agenda. It's been in place for decades at
this point. It's been spoken about pretty openly, especially since the 70s. I think there
are my intelligent sort of assumption and inkling
is that there are truly believers, right?
So there are people who genuinely believe
these sort of mouth-usian arguments of,
it's not about space, it's answering your question to them,
it's about resources, right?
So in the past, I think goes back to Thomas mouth
this couple centuries ago, where he believed that
if the global population passes, I don't know, two billion or something like that, then
there's going to be mass starvation because at the moment we only have this amount of food
and this amount of clean water and so on, so if the population outstrips that, that's going
to lead to all these problems.
That's imagining we never innovate.
Exactly.
We never prevent you from doing any of this.
Yeah, so I think there are the true believers.
There are the people who genuinely, genuinely truly believe
that overpopulation, quote unquote, is a massive issue.
It's gonna cause all these problems.
And so we need to act now to stem this.
I think there's the true believers.
And I think they're wrong, but I don't think
there's any sort of wickedness or malice in that.
And then there are the people who looping background to what we said earlier.
You know, there are people who I believe are genuine or genuinely anti-human, right?
They're anti-human. They do not like, you know, maybe they like some individual people,
but they're not generally pro-human. They are, they're people who view human beings as this sort of...
A cancer on earth. A cancer.
Yeah, you've heard that.
A cancer, a parasite.
People use that to refer to babies in the womb sometimes, a parasite.
The humans are this sort of, by the way, a lot of people who do like mass bombings and mass
shootings, you use the same type of language that human beings are these parasites and wicked
creatures and, you know, the best thing for the nature and for the world and for other
animals is to reduce, you know the best thing for the nature and for the world and for other animals
is to
reduce you know reduce the number of
These parasites in their terms
So I think those are the two sort of main lines of thinking. I think one of them is more I think one of them is wrong
but more quote-unquote benevolent in a way.
And the other I do just think is like, you know, evil, malicious and evil and anti-human.
And I don't think that it's, sadly, I don't think that that type of thinking is as rare
as I wish it was.
When you really talk to some people, you can really see that they're not, they're not pro-human,
right? They
don't really, the type of people who even use terms like, I don't know, speciesism, right?
Kind of people who think that, okay, well, I've had arguments with people where they're
like, well, what's so special about human beings? Right? Like, no, no, really, right?
They're like, yeah, and I'm kind of like, how long do you want the list? Yeah, and maybe, maybe, maybe this is, again, maybe this is where complete godlessness
sort of leads to, because if you reach the final position that you know, we are just advanced
apes on this spinning planet, then yeah, why would we have like my argument about what makes
human being so special if you go deep, ultimately I'm going to have to come down to a religious argument, right,
which is that man is made in the image of God and we are uniquely set apart
from all other animal species and plant species and so on.
We are uniquely set apart and we have a soul and consciousness and so on.
And we're made in God's image, dogs, chickens, cats, monkeys, they're not made in God's image.
This does not mean that they don't matter or they don't have value or we should just wipe them out.
No, no, no, no, but human beings are uniquely distinct.
But if you collapse all that and you don't believe any of it, then it's like, okay,
well, chimpanzees are equal to us.
Dogs, cats, ants, mice, like they're all, they're all equal to us dogs, cats, ants, mice, like they're all equal to us.
And so I don't think there's even that much of an issue in wanting to, I don't know,
protect or preserve animals or anything like that at all.
But I think when you bring human beings down to the level of just being another animal,
then that's, again, this is where you end up
in this territory.
This is where people start making,
you know, have you seen what's going on
with euthanasia and Canada and some other countries?
Now mental illness qualifies you.
Yeah, right, but this is where it goes,
because what happens if a dog is very sick
or a dog, you put it down, right?
And people are like, well, why can't you do the same if human
beings are just another animal, right? Then what would be the argument against that? And
I think because I think people don't think about these things that deeply and realize,
okay, well, you know, you hear a lot of people talk about slippery slope fallacies. And it's
like the slippery slope is not typically a fallacy. It's just seeing second, third and fourth order
consequences of things that are going
on.
If you make, by the way, this is one of my biggest concerns.
This is my biggest concern with the whole push of transgendarism on children.
My biggest concern is not most people's concerns, because most people are only thinking first
and second order.
My biggest concern is that if you are saying that a 12, 13, 14 year old child can consent
to something so drastic as a social,
let alone medical transition, right?
If a 13 year old girl is can consent
to getting a double mastectomy
and having whatever, you know, rendering herself
in fertile, going on hormone treatments, whatever it is because she wants to be a quote, unquote,
different gender. Then you are eliminating the concept of children not being able to consent.
This is the greatest danger of the push for transgenderism on children. It's not just, it's not
about, it's not just women's sports or changing rooms or this or that.
It's you are obliterating a hard line that we have always had in society.
About to say, why can't a child get tattoo?
Why can't children smoke?
Why can't they get a car loan?
They can't.
They would.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Right.
There's a lot of things we recognize fundamentally, legally, ethically, morally.
There's a distinction between adults. So somebody old, yes. there's a lot of things we recognize, fundamentally, legally, ethically, morally, there's a distinction between adults.
So somebody old, yeah.
There's a distinction.
Well, this is where, this is the problem, right?
To me, it's a gateway to pedophilia.
It's absolutely a gateway to it.
And to some people, that's like, oh, well,
that's a fallacy or what?
And I'm like, no, it's not, because what would be the argument,
if you are saying that, and by the way, okay,
why do we say that children can't consent to these things? Because the human brain and physical and emotional
maturity is not developed enough at a young age in order to, we know that, I mean, brain
fully finishes developing what, around 25, right? And one of the things with young people
is they don't understand long term, they struggle to understand long term consequences. Right.
You have to get a lot older until you recognize, okay, we've all been there.
Yeah. If I do, yeah, exact, right teenagers, preteens, impulsive, you're not
thinking long term, which is why you have certain safeguards and things.
So if you're saying, okay, at 12 year olds, older, 13 or whatever, you're old
enough to make a permanent, think about this. You're actually, okay, at 12 year olds, old or 13 or whatever, you're old enough to make a permanent thing about this.
You're actually, in many of these cases, you'd be rendering the person in fertile for life.
So you're saying that a 13 year old is making a decision at 13 about if they ever want to naturally have children.
If they want these permanent changes, like you wouldn't let them get a tattoo, right? Because you reckon, no, that's per...
That's you don't understand the, you might think,
okay, it's cool having this little logo
or design on my arm.
But cut off your boobs.
But it's, it's, it's, it's nutty.
It's nutty.
I just remembered I was gonna come back to you
about something to be optimistic about.
Yeah.
Now that we've,
now that we've gone right down,
we've gone real deep, I didn't know we were gonna go
this deep, it was quite, it was real deep. But, He's like, we were gonna go this deep, I was talking about this.
But.
He's like, they're gonna talk to me about bench presses.
I know, I know, I know.
It's over at Nutrition and how much protein.
I think we've passed peak work.
I think we've passed the peak.
I agree.
And I don't think we've passed the peak
of the stupidity and foolishness,
but I think we've passed the peak of the tolerance
for it explicitly and implicitly.
More and more people on all levels are starting to see
some of these problems
and more importantly, speak out on them.
Talking about these issues in 2017, 2018, 2019,
like it was pretty lonely, right?
It was kind of like, oh gosh, like why is no one else
talking about this?
Am I the crazy one, whatever?
You know, just like how now it's okay
to sort of question the efficacy and safety
of the C19 jabs, and it's okay to question the,
but like doing that two years ago,
for like, yeah, there you go, right? Like it was, you Oh, you're like, I got kicked off social media. Yeah, there you go.
Right, like it was, you know, you could do it,
but it was like, what, like the tide,
you passed a certain peak,
and the tide begins to turn,
and the over-to-n window opens,
and I think that now,
and perhaps this was due to the lockdowns,
because I think a lot of parents saw
what their kids were learning with remote learning,
and certain things,
you had the whole BLM fall out, which woke a lot of people up to, I meant, I remember.
Did it?
Dude, in 2020, when I spoke out against BLM, people wanted to freaking crucify me, man.
Yeah.
Well, I peep of all that I've put out over 130,000 tweets.
The one that caused the only one that ever caused real problems for me in my personal life
was my criticism of BLM
Now you saw early on when you saw them
Remember when we didn't post the black square have people's heads exploded
Yeah, I mean we refuse to do that
So you saw that early on where you looked at it and you said because I saw this I saw this I said oh these are
Opportunists. They're totally taking advantage of a situation. They're gonna capitalize on it and because
All there's no real leader.
And because all these corporations
wanna capitalize on this movement as well,
they're gonna virtue signal,
and they're gonna promote this organization.
And so I agree with the sentiment,
I don't agree with the organization,
and now we know, we look back,
we look at the tax records.
Yeah, well this is what's interesting,
because I mean, I worked out this organization
was a scam maybe back in 2017 or so,
because BLM is not new.
I think I like,
it didn't just start in 2020, started I believe in 2015 2006 whenever I think after
the Michael Brown shooting. So I had done due to it like I knew it was run I've known for
five I've known for five years they just run by Marxist. Yeah. It's run by Marxist.
They've got like all these agendas that have nothing to do with black people they're trying
to overthrow capitalism and dismantle the nuclear family.
Yeah.
And all the things, even the tagline versus what they promote, it's like, well, you know,
the movement is really black lives matter if killed by a white police officer in dubious
circumstances during an election year.
Right.
Like, that's really the full. And it gets election year, right? Like that's really the full.
And it gets media.
Yeah, like that's really the full thing, right?
The top 20 killers of black people in America
or worldwide, the police are not one of them.
Okay, it's not even in the top 20.
So if you had a movement called Black Lives Matter
and you genuinely meant what it said on the tin,
then let's talk about heart
disease, let's talk about strokes, let's talk about accidents, let's talk about suicides,
let's talk about homicides primarily, who are, which are committed by other black people
on black people.
Let's talk about all the things.
Let's take the top 10 things that kill black people and let's make a movement around trying
to reduce those things,
right? Yeah, exactly. And also, if your issue is police brutality and police killings,
the police in the USA every single year kill more white people than they do black people.
Most people can't even name one. Right? Yes, proportion as a percentage of the population.
They, yes, proportion as a percentage of the population.
It's, you know, it's disproportionately black people and so on, but it's like, look, this thing is just a scam. It's a hijacking. And if you really wanted to talk about whether you want to talk about the police brutality or police violence issue,
or you wanted to talk about, you know, black lives actually mattering and things that are killing black people,
again, top of the line actually abortion,
then these would be very different conversations
and you wouldn't want to racialize the police brutality
and police killing issue
because the majority of people being killed
by police in the USA,
even in these unarmed situations
and scenarios where it shouldn't be happened
are not black people.
So why are you limiting to that?
Obviously they're doing it for political reasons
and to jack up people's emotions.
But yeah, anyway, I worked this all out many years ago.
So when I saw this reincarnation come up again in 2020,
I was like, this thing's a scam.
And people were like, oh my gosh, how dare you.
Yeah, what kind of conversation are you getting?
Man, I don't even want to get into it too much
because it was actually, it got too close to home.
It got way too close to home.
I've been vindicated now obviously
because with all the text filings
and all the stuff that fell out,
people now know, you know, again.
Some don't though, you don't say that's crazy.
How much that doesn't hit the mainstream views.
Like you have to kind of dig for that.
Yeah, not everyone, but literally,
summer 2020, when I came out and said
the BLM is a scam, people weren't really not with me, man.
Now I can say it, two years later, you can say it,
and it's like, okay, you're now,
a quote unquote allowed to say that.
One of the things I get a lot of flak from
is just being early.
Yeah, I get a lot of flak.
I was early on the C19 stuff. I was early on the BLM stuff.
Like sometimes I'll just say something that's on the trans stuff. Like I just kind of say things early
and you know you receive a ton of flack for that and get called us to names or whatever.
And then you know one year or two years, three years down the line.
You're vindicated. Yeah you get. You. You know, no one kind of recognizes that.
I recognize that about you.
I see you always, one of the first people to speak out
a bit of a maverick.
When it's very unpopular, say what you're gonna say.
It's a very least question.
You do a good job of just questioning it, like.
Yeah, which I appreciate.
Even if I were to disagree with you, by the way,
I appreciate anybody who has encouraged to do that
because, I mean mean your business is
built now around media and we now know just how much
control and power they have and how they can shut people
off and kick them out. I'm sure you got shadow band many
times. Yeah my account was throttled until Elan took over
from probably 2019 until Elan took over. I wasn't shadow
band but my account was throttled,
meaning that they just like remove followers.
Yeah, they limit my follower growth.
But I'll be honest, man, to me, it's not the thing,
the compliment I get most often wherever I am
is actually people thanking me for my courage or bravery.
And while it's sort of flattering in one way,
I don't even consider myself like
stupendously brave or courageous,
because I just think the bar for that has fallen a lot.
Right?
I'm like, I'm like,
I'm like, you should be a life-to-be-the-truth,
you're so courageous.
I'm like, man, I'm just,
I'm just, I'm like, I'm just talking,
like I'm not, you know, being shipped off overseas to, you know, go fight,
you know, have blitz flying at me or bombs or whatever,
like I'm just saying what I think on podcasts
and on Twitter and on stage.
And again, I don't think that anything I'm saying is,
you know, whether people agree or disagree
with various elements of it, you know,
I don't think anything I'm saying is sort of that out there
or, you know, some sort of crazy position
or anything like that.
But yeah, to me, it's an ethical and it's a moral duty. It's not, um, to me, it's like a compulsion.
It's not something that I have to sort of
motivate myself to do. It's like I can't not. If I have a belief or a position on something and I've really thought it through and I'm seeing,
you know, like if I see the train of society and culture sort of speeding up ahead and I know
that there's a not in the railway line or there's something that's going to derail the train or
it's heading towards a cliff. Just like I'd feel compelled
to say something, right? Not just keep quiet, because while other people can't see the
knot in the line. So let me just watch this accident happen in slow motion. I'm like, I
feel a compulsion to get, hey, this is where we're heading. And if we're not carefully,
it was like, like with all the, all the, all the, all the Rhona stuff, right? With the lockdowns and the mandates and this.
And I was saying in 2020, early 2020 to mid 2020, what was going to happen, right?
I was calling it saying, like, look, if you accept this, this is going to eventually lead
to people, you know, I saw the Vax mandate before the Vax was even, you recall the conspiracy
theorist.
I was talking about, quote, unquote, vaccine passports before the vaccine was even rolled out
Right and people are like no, that's not gonna happen whatever what and I'm like dude
if you this is a compliance ladder that you're on if you if you accept each of these steps
Then you're eventually gonna be in a position on as a nation as a society where this thing is being mandated
And now you're not in a position to fight back. And that's exactly how it played out.
And yeah, I could just see it coming.
I know.
Do you know what's really scary is could you imagine if it actually worked better?
If what worked better?
The vaccine.
Imagine if actually the statistics that have rolled out for the last year actually were more
favorable.
It would justify that to me.
It's really scary.
I'll tell you, we're almost lucky that all the stuff came out later that look, it's
still spread.
Look, if you're at this age, it really does.
It's like the shitty vaccine.
It's all the same.
That's what I mean.
I mean, could you imagine, do you know what?
A lot of people have said that, or imagine if the virus was a lot worse, right?
People say that.
It would have been better.
You think so?
Yes.
Okay, tell me how.
Because there wouldn't have needed, so some people are like, well, what if the virus
had like a 10% kill rate instead of 0.2 or whatever it is, right?
You wouldn't need any coercion.
No, everybody would have just, you wouldn't need any coercion.
If there were genuinely, genuinely, okay, imagine if there was like, I don't know,
airborne Ebola, right?
Imagine if there was just something floating around outside,
and if you get it, even as a young healthy man,
that's a good point.
Like there's a, there's no man-
There's no mandate.
It's easy.
There's no man-
Yeah, there's no mandates.
There's no coercion.
There's no playing people off of each other and dividing.
There's no propaganda to pump up the PR
and the advertising of the virus or anything like that.
It's just like, look, this is the reality of it.
People are naturally self-preserving
and people will act accordingly.
The reason why they even were able to do
so many of these shenanigans is that
it kind of hit this sweet spot of being like,
not like, not complete, not a complete nothing burger.
Right.
Right.
Not like, okay, it's literally just a cold,
it wasn't that, but also not so,
like it was kind of hit this sweet spot.
It was close enough that you were
kind of set in.
And it's kind of set in.
It was close enough that you were
kind of set in.
And it's kind of set in.
It was close enough that you were
kind of set in.
And it's kind of set in.
And it's kind of set in.
And it's kind of set in. And it's kind of set in. And it's kind of set in. And it's kind of set in. And it's kind of set in. right, so they could step in and do all of the coercion because people were not, you know,
some people were like, oh my gosh, I'm freaking out, I'm double masking, I'm doing this, I'm
doing that. Other people are like, eh, whatever, right? Let's just go about our lives and this
created this clash. Super division. Yeah, where they are then able to just, once people are
divided, you can always step in as an authority. And people have a fundamental misunderstanding
of liberty on that content in that
scenario because people like well, it's yes, you're free, but you're not free to give it to someone else. No, no, that's not how freedom works. You are free to take the risks
you want to take and meet with who you want to meet with. And if you want to business,
you're free to put a sign on your door that says, yeah, if you're unvaccinated, you can't come in here.
And if you're vaccinated, you can. That's freedom. You're not free to give it to someone else.
Yes.
No, no, no.
You can stay home.
You can meet with people.
You take the risks you want.
That's liberty.
And by the way, when you compare the states,
and this is one of the two things I think kept America
freer than most of the Western world during that period
of time, even though I think we still went too far,
one was, I think, our second amendment always makes people go, huh, the second one is our state system because
we have states that can say, no, the federal government can't necessarily impose across
the country.
But what that did is, is we have wonderful comparisons.
You can see how free states acted versus not so free states.
And what's funny is that when the infection rates got high,
people in states that were more free,
they still kind of acted the way that people would normally act.
They stayed home more, they didn't meet it,
you know, with people as much.
So it was a lot better.
But I do think this is important to say,
and I'd love your opinion on this.
It seems to me that one of the litmus tests
or one of the ways you could see what's going on in
the world, is whenever there's something very powerful, a movement, it's a prime vehicle
to be hijacked. Like racism, it really existed. And there were movements towards working
against, you know, taking laws down that were clearly discriminatory. Then it started
to get hijacked, feminism. There were there were like, there were real laws against women
and women couldn't have,
they couldn't, you know, take,
they would hold wounds.
They're just, yeah, and they just kinda hijacked it.
The LGBT community, right?
You had real issues where, you know,
if you were gay, you could get thrown in jail
and you know, that kinda stuff.
And, but it started to get hijacked.
And it gets hijacked by these groups
that grab onto this movement and then say,
and a lot of them are Marxists.
And Marxist theory doesn't just have to be economic.
They got their asses kicked economically,
so they don't even focus on that anymore.
Now they like to focus on the other stuff.
They tend to get hijacked.
Do you think, for example, the latest one,
the big one, right, is the LGBT movement
and in particular, this kind of trans gender movement? Do you think they're gone too far? Do you think they've been hijacked?
Yes. Here's a bar for you. Every social movement without a clearly defined finish line ultimately
ends up becoming what it's set out to fight against. How do you mean? They all, so if there's not a clear end line, clear goal,
where it's like, okay, after we achieve this, we can, we're done, we can chill.
Should have down activism, right? They, they go and progress to the point, it was like
that Pac-Man analogy.
I'm just gonna steal this thing. I'm gonna close the Pac-Man theory.
Yeah, where they come out on the other side, right? Where they become the bigots,
they become the intolerant, they become the hateful ones, they become the ones
dividing people, they become the ones obsessed with the labels and whatever.
I don't give a crap if someone's gay. I don't care. I don't care whatever, but they beat you over the head with it
and they start actively discriminating against other people
and applying these names and labels to other people
where they claim that was, so look at modern day
what they call quote unquote anti-racism.
They've come full circle background to you should judge people by their skin color.
You should treat people differently and talk to people differently based on their skin
color.
We should have different rules and laws and policies based on someone's skin color, whether
it's affirmative action, or I've seen live events where they charge white people more
for the tickets.
Right?
I've seen live music events, person of color ticket, $30, white person
ticket, $50. What? Like, what? Right? Like, that's right. Yeah, it's, it's, it's bonkers,
right? Look at the excesses of feminism. Okay. As we know, when someone gets like way too
deep on this modern day feminism stuff, what happens? They end up hating men. They end up
becoming sexist. It becomes a female supremacy
Movement is no longer about gender equality and fairness and equal opportunities. Now it's smashed the patriarchy now
It's men are toxic now. It's boys are defective girls now. So why do we why do we even need men? Whatever like it gets to this level where
You you set out apparently to fight against hate or discrimination or inequality on unfairness or whatever and you go so far that now the boots on the other foot and you're the person who's kind of got this
That seems so far.
And it's been around here.
You know, going to school got bullied for not being gay.
For what?
Not being gay.
That's true.
You never really came to work, the whole side. What is happening? There's whole school classes where the entire class
I just move my mind. Yeah, yeah, it just went completely full circle. Yeah, it's if a movement
Two years ago
Came to work and he told us the story and he's like yeah
There's like six of these kids and they're running around with the rainbow flag and then they're
going to get in the flag for a while.
And they're looking on the straight kids.
By the, by the way.
That's all.
I mean, look, it's interesting.
I mean, I had an interesting experience in November.
I got protested for the first time.
So I spoke at a university in Florida,
funnily enough on freedom of speech,
and about 40 protesters of show or so showed up.
And you know, they had their chance, they had their flags, their signs.
I'd never been personally protested before and it was quite surreal.
But it was interesting because again, it was a great example of them being what they think,
they are what they think they're fighting against.
They think they're fighting against intolerance and fascism and what, and I'm like,
you're the ones trying to shut me down
funnily enough, a black man.
Yeah, not even to play that card,
but there's this irony in it with all these white kids
they're protesting me and trying to get me,
and I was like, oh, you know,
and some of them are holding BLM signs.
I'm like, this is cute. You know what I mean?
You're like, dude, you guys not
right in the South Park at the time.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Like are you guys not sort of seeing what you're doing?
Anytime something has a lot of power,
then it's primed to be taken over by people seeking power
in particular politicians.
If a movement is over, I mean, you don't have the power
behind it.
If something is solved, if a problem
is solved, we no longer have that issue that we can, you know, hang over people to get
them to vote for me. So it becomes politically powerful to have and talk about lots of these
issues. It becomes, it's an effective tool. When you find an effective tool, this is, look,
this is true for all human history.
I can use fire as an example.
Fire, very, very transformative, powerful tool.
I can build with it, I can build societies with,
I can burn you, I can take you down,
nuclear energy.
Now we could provide energy for the whole world.
We can actually solve our climate issues
with nuclear energy.
We could also make nuclear bombs
and kill each other.
So I think that's what happens.
Anytime you see a big movement, always look for the people.
So I tell my kids,
anytime you see a huge movement,
look for the people who are ready to grab that movement
and use it for nefarious reasons
because they're there and they're waiting.
Yeah, they're waiting for something.
Yeah.
I think it's really important to always check power
both within ourselves as individuals
and also on a societal level because, as they say, absolute power corrupts.
Absolutely.
And just as we were talking about different personality types, some people do absolutely
have a tendency towards authoritarianism and power tripping.
And you can see this with certain parents,
you can see it with certain bosses, you can see, you know, it's just all these human traits
are put on a normal distribution curve, right? So there's always going to be a 5% who
are, you know, on that end and a 5% on that end. And you know, some people, you give them
some power, however little and immediately they're tripping off it and they're
trying to control everyone.
I'm glad you did.
Yeah, it could be the most minor hall monitor, right?
It could be the most minor thing and that's something that we always have to be aware of
and ourselves as well.
I constantly, I do my best to consciously check myself
on multiple things all the time, right?
As my star grows and I become more popular
and more influential in whatever, especially,
I always have to, you know,
I'm aware of my own personality type
and things that I might have a tendency towards
or a leaning and day after day, multiple times a day,
you have to kind of
re-ground yourself and apply perspective and apply gratitude and, you know, stay attached to
the world and know what to, you know, it's a constant battle to navigate. But I think that
one thing, I'm a big fan of one thing,'ve hopefully I've been able to do on this podcast and with all the other work that I'm doing is to just, you know, raise, raise human consciousness somewhat, raise the level of critical thinking, raise the level of self empowerment and people taking accountability and responsibility and doing my best to lead by example, both for people younger and older than me.
And I think if everyone just did that and focused more on that internal rather than external
locus of control, then I think that's how we truly change the world.
And it doesn't mean that we're all going to end up agreeing with each other on everything
or all going to be on the same team, right?
But at least at a minimum, things will be civil,
and people can get on with each other,
and people will at least understand each other, right?
You can at least be like, okay, you know what?
Like, okay, we agree on these things
or we disagree on these, but the disagreement is not
because you're evil or because you're hateful
or because you're discreet, it's just that,
you know, we have a slightly different angle
on disagreeing.
And here's another thing that's interesting,
and this is why these type of conversations are so important.
Because I think oftentimes people just see the final
conclusions and they miss all the epistemology
of people's arguments.
And what I mean by that is say you take any of these issues
that people talk about, right? And one person
reaches this position, one person reaches that position. If you only know the end point,
and you don't know how they reach there, then people tend to assume, again, because of
the tribalism or just lazy thinking, people often ascribe the worst possible motives, why
someone may have reached a certain conclusion. Whereas the reality is, if there's a ten-step process in reaching that conclusion, they
could agree on the first eight and then, okay, on the ninth one, that's where they deviate.
It's rarely the case that someone holds a position because they're just hateful or because
they want the world to be a worse place, or because whatever it is.
Even on something that is, we literally talked about like the greatest landmine issue
of abortion, right?
Regardless of someone's view on it, the easiest and laziest framing is to just claim
malice and evil on the other side, right?
If you're pro-life, it's very easy,
but I would say lazy, to just make the claim
that anyone who thinks abortion should be legal
or is permissible up to a certain stage or whatever,
that they're just evil, the hate babies,
they're supporting murder, right?
Like that's the lazy one.
Lazy one on the flip side of someone considers themselves
pro-choice and they come across
someone's pro-life.
Oh, you hate women.
You hate women.
You're pro-first-forced birth.
You're this.
You're that right.
You're sexist.
You're trying to implement the handmaid's tail.
Whatever it is.
And I can see why people are tempted by that because it's easy to score points and it doesn't
take much thinking and it's lazy.
But the truth is on this and every other issue is it's more Because it's easy to score points and it doesn't take much thinking and it's lazy. But the truth is, on this and every other issue
is it's more, it's way more nuanced
and it's interesting to know, okay,
why, how have you reached this, this, this final answer?
You know, you know in school and they say,
you show your work, right?
Even in math, right?
Don't just write down the answer is three, right?
We want to see.
How did you get there?
How did you get there? And maybe there was a, okay, wait write down the answer is three. We want to see how did you get there?
How did you get there?
And maybe there was, okay, wait, that's not consistent there.
This is why I think, this is when I start to think positive,
because of the internet and the infinite amount of bandwidth,
we can now have two hour conversations about topics,
whereas before, when I was growing up,
it was impossible.
The bandwidth was so short, it was like 30 seconds.
If you're lucky, 30 minutes, but that was rare,
it was a 30 minute discussion.
Now we can have podcasts, we could talk things out,
people can listen and go, oh, that kind of makes sense,
or let me question that a little bit.
Do you have any mentors, by the way?
Do you have any people that you, maybe either consciously,
or people you know, or you don't know,
but are there anybody that you look to
and you that influences your way of thinking or you like to kind of look and see their kind of work
I would always say my top mentors and role models of course in my parents
And I hope my future children can say the same
In terms of popular figures. I'm a fan of anyone who seeks and speaks the truth and
Who's willing to have these discussions and conversations? It's why I'm a fan of anyone who seeks and speaks the truth and who's willing to have these discussions
in conversations.
It's why I'm a fan of Jordan Peterson.
I like Joe Rogan.
I love all the stuff that the daily wire is doing.
You know, that whole, anyone who's sort of out there and having these, you know, what
you guys are doing, anyone who's out here having these conversations
and is willing to do it and willing to listen
and try to understand the human condition,
then I find that inspiring
and I'm trying to do the same thing
because I've traveled to so many different countries
of lived in different places, met so many different types
of people and one thing that's always important
to remember in all these conversations and day-to-day life is that most people all around the world want fairly similar
things in the grand scheme. And also that people are, you know, human beings are both good and bad.
We have virtues, we have vices, we're, you know, we're flawed, but we're also, I often say we're
the best and worst thing on the planet, right, but we're also, I often say we're the best and worst
thing on the planet, right?
And we're also the most complicated, especially when you combine millions or billions of us together
like, what the heck, like it's crazy that any of it works.
And I genuinely just have a love for, I have a love for humanity, like I'm very pro-human.
I'm, it's funny because a lot of people would call me conservative, but I'm very, like,
in some ways I'm actually very progressive in the sense of my overall view of the fact
that I think we can be and we can do better and we can move forward.
I don't think the way we move forward is by breaking the entire system and trying to rebuild
it from nothing, but by maintaining the things that we know work and carefully tweaking,
the things that don't and by actually empowering the individual and empowering families and
empowering small communities, it's not this top down.
All right, we just need to change that thing in the government
and the federal government and make some top down mandate
that's gonna fix it.
I was like, no, that's not gonna,
that's gonna just lead to tyranny.
Have you, have you wanted to quit?
No, I've done.
Have you, I know you have a pretty optimistic attitude
about things and so.
Even with the light heat you got, you weren't like,
oh, you know, let's be real, man. I get a hundred times more love than the light heat you got, you weren't like, oh, you know.
Let's be real, man, I get 100 times more love
than I get heat.
Okay, good.
Like I get so much freaking love.
In every smart enough to attach yourself to that.
Every country, I get so, especially over the last few years
it's been just love, love, love everywhere.
So I'm not gonna let a very tiny percentage of people,
even though that tiny percent might be thousands
of comments and messages or whatever.
Is there any aspect though of the,
you know, how much your life has probably changed
in just the last five years or so,
like that you don't like, I mean,
is there parts of it that you maybe didn't see
and you're like, ah, you know, this,
I'm not a big fan of that or I don't like that,
or wish I had less of that in my life now. I don't even think that way, man. That's funny. Honestly or I don't like that or less, I wish I had less of that in my life now.
I don't even think that way, man.
That's funny.
Honestly, I don't think that way.
To me, it's a blessing.
And my goal, the reason I even wanted to become a musician
to begin with in terms of profession is because I wanted
to have a positive, inspirational,
and motivational impact on millions of people.
And I realized I wasn't gonna do that
in the corporate world.
Tell me a little bit more that
because I actually don't know that's part of your story
of like, you know, was getting out on social,
like was that really motivated by initially,
like the trying to get your rap career going?
And then it just kind of unfolded the way it did.
Like did you have this vision of,
I'm gonna say these controversial things.
No, no, no, no.
And it's, what's interesting is this shows you
how the world has shifted.
Because when I started my music career,
I released my first album in 2006.
And I didn't realize that far.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
I've put out nine albums and EPs.
And it wasn't until the mid to late 2010s.
Like when I first started, I mean,
I was considered like, I don't know, people who knew my music,
I was kind of like a British Will Smith kind of, you know, like super uncontroversial., I don't know, people who knew my music, I was kind of like a British
Will Smith kind of, you know, like super uncontroversial, like I don't even cuss.
Right?
Like a rapper who doesn't even cuss, doesn't promote any degeneracy, I don't even drink alcohol.
Like, you know, I was almost like, he's boring.
Right?
Like, there's not like, that's, that was considered boring and that was just like whatever.
And then the world, it's like the world has tilted so far off its axis
and become so debased in various ways
that someone like myself to some is now considered controversial.
Even though, right?
It's actually really funny when you think about that.
It's funny, like I have it.
You were like the square ass rapper.
And I feel like it's cheating.
Yeah, no, it's kind of like, oh my gosh, like. Whoa, he's bringing the cheap. Yeah, no, it's kind of like, oh my gosh, like,
whoa, he's bringing the heat.
Yeah, yeah, it's weird.
When you started rapping now, did you,
did you like, it was part of the reason of being,
you know, quote unquote,
is a more square rapper was because maybe you,
did you see like how, so a lot of rap was,
glorifying, killing and drugs.
I mean, dude, I wouldn't even use the term square.
I'd just say real.
Yeah.
I'm just real and I'm honest about who I am.
Yeah, but you took the approach of not really
swearing, you know, trying to get both those things.
That's reality, because I don't swear in real life.
Okay.
All right, I'm not swearing in this conversation.
I don't swear in real life.
So if I went in the studio and suddenly started
cussing up a storm, that would be like that's fake.
Mm-hmm, right?
Yeah. I've never sold drugs or drugs. What you see, okay, you kind that would be like, that's fake, right? Sure.
I've never sold drugs or drugs.
Which you see, okay, you're not gonna
suddenly be in a lot in rap though, right?
There's a lot of fakeness going on rap people
pretending to be drug dealers and acting like
they're moving weight.
It's like you've never.
It's goofy, I mean, I'm not gonna do that.
Like number one, it's not real.
And number two, it's not pro-social, right?
Well, if I can reach hundreds of thousands
or millions of people with a message, especially young people, why would I want to push something
that's destructive on them, especially if I know that it's not real and it's not my own
reality or anything like that? So my approach from the very beginning was just like, look,
I'm going to be totally real about who I am. Like, I used to, you know, I've got songs where I mentioned
that I'm in, I studied in Oxford University. Right? I'm not there trying to pretend
oh, I came from, I came from the streets and I was had to sell crack to survive. Well,
my dad's a freaking medical doctor. Like, everyone knows that. Right? Like, I'm from an intact
family. My parents have been married almost 50 years.
Like, I'm blessed, I'm privileged in many ways, right?
And I will state that and I'm not insecure about it
or whatever, it's not a bad thing.
So for me, that was always simple
and I've simply just taken that
and expanded it into more areas.
So now, maybe people know me now more from podcasting or Twitter or YouTube
or some of the live events and stuff that I do,
but it's still the same message.
It's been all the way through.
If you go back and listen to my album,
Commercial Underground from 2006,
I made that one in my teens.
It's the same messaging.
I'm saying the same stuff.
Some of it was actually quite prescient, in fact fact on the very first song on my very first album. I have a lyric where I say
My style is unbelievable. I did my research and my ideas are inconceivable like men giving birth
I said that in 2000. And you wouldn't even try to be a commercial pro-liffic, right?
You were at it.
You were at it in 16 years later, you know, you're seeing the op-eds.
Come and get your breath.
You know, I'm like, oh, wow.
Like I said that because it was such a far-fetched phrase.
People were to pull up that song, be like, she's always there.
She's like, yeah, but it shows how much press-fired.
Oh, that's wild.
Yeah, so it was how much things have shifted.
But look, man, I do my best to do my best and just
encourage other people, encourage other people to do the same.
You know, we live in an amazing time where there's so much
opportunity and there's so much to be optimistic about and
there's so much positive, but also on the flip side, there's
a lot of stuff to be pessimistic about and there's a lot of
stuff that's concerning and demoralizing, and all of that.
And through that, even through all the nonsense
going on with COVID and whatever,
if I can be a light to some people,
or I can just say something that helps them reframe
things in a better way, or I've helped tons of people
to get in the gym and improve their workouts,
or pursue what they want to do,
entrepreneurily, whatever it is. I often don't even know just like
you guys won't you'll you'll never know exactly how much impact you're having on
people right all these episodes you've done over the years there's just
something you can flip and they just say in a podcast and you know what there's
one kid who hears that and it's like yeah it makes it just click for them and
then it puts them on a different trajectory and path and I'm like and that ripples outwards
Yeah, we've been impacted screw it like that. So we talk about we do live events every once in a while
We don't do them that often
But we absolutely love it because it grounds us every time because you get an opportunity to see the face
You get to see that and I tell you what I talk about giving fuel for what you do like you see that one person who like
I've never met that person
and looked how much that message impacted their lives.
So it's incredible.
Yeah, you know what I appreciate about you
is that you don't take any of all of this for granted,
which I think is rare these days.
I think, you know, you made the comment earlier
about how there's billions of people,
and miraculously it all works.
People don't really understand the gravity of that.
It is not in our nature to respect somebody's individual liberties or rights. It's not in our
nature to not oppress somebody weaker than you or smaller than you. It's not in our nature
oppress somebody weaker than you or smaller than you. It's not in our nature to have laws that protect people that way
or to view people that, you know, as,
although we're different that we all should be treated the same,
that's so against our nature.
And it's crazy that we're here
and I think people have taken it for so far for granted
that they're going in the opposite direction.
I don't think a lot of people realize
you use the term useful idiots.
By the way, that's an old term.
Use-filediates were the people that helped these revolutions happen in some of these countries
were tyrannical regimes took over.
And then the first people to be thrown in the gulags afterwards.
I don't think a lot of people realize what they're asking for.
I think they take for granted where we're at.
I mean, I admittedly was that way.
I felt like for until I actually thought of it like that,
like, wow, it's not in our human nature to do these things.
Therefore, having the attitude, like I probably had just say a decade ago,
I'm like, yeah, as long as you're not bugging me or getting encroaching in my life,
I don't care whatever you guys can all argue about it.
But when you start to realize the downstream effects of not saying anything and that it
is in our human nature to try and oppress and control people that if you do not speak up,
the natural thing that will take its course.
Yeah, to constantly stop it.
Yes.
That's the direction that it's always going.
Here's a telltale.
This is a tell for me when somebody or an ideology or people that represent
an ideology refuse to debate and discuss things. Those are the people that are wrong. Those
are the people that you should not listen to and not follow. Because if somebody has good
ideas, then they will stand the test of debate, discussion, and the test of time. And if
people are not willing to talk and discuss, and especially if they are trying to silence other people
from talking, just from talking, that's the enemy.
And their ideology is the evil one or the wrong one.
So that's the tell.
Good ideas don't require censorship.
Correct.
That idea is always do.
Totally.
Well bro, this has been great.
Thank you guys.
I really appreciate it.
I really appreciate it.
This has been a lot of fun.
We went so much deeper than I was
anticipating but I'm glad we knew we wanted
I think people look at us and they're when we found you way back when I think you and you said it
I mean, I think I just it's hard to actually find people that that genuinely want to be lights into this world and
and can articulate it well. Yeah
So I think we've liked your work for a really long time.
Just glad we finally made it happen.
So glad to have you here.
Appreciate you coming on, man.
Thank you, guys.
Thank you.
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